H122
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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Allied Irish Banks Plc -v- McKenna & ors [2014] IEHC 122 (12 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2014/H122.html Cite as: [2014] IEHC 122 |
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Judgment Title: Allied Irish Banks Plc -v- McKenna & ors Neutral Citation: [2014] IEHC 122 High Court Record Number: 2011 2997S Date of Delivery: 12/03/2014 Court: High Court Composition of Court: Judgment by: Birmingham J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation: [2014] IEHC 122 THE HIGH COURT [2011 No. 2997S] BETWEEN ALLIED IRISH BANKS PLC PLAINTIFF AND
KARL MCKENNA, DAMIAN DONLON AND PAUL COPELAND DEFENDANTS JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Birmingham delivered the 12th day of March 2014 1. In this case the plaintiff is now seeking summary judgment against the second and third named defendants, judgment having been obtained previously against the first named defendant, on foot of a guarantee entered into by all three defendants dated the 11th December, 2007, by virtue of which the liabilities of a company known as Kapada Limited, of which all the defendants were directors and shareholders, to the plaintiff bank were guaranteed to a limit of €250,000. The amount sought in the present proceedings against both defendants is €168,345. 2. The application for a summary judgment is resisted both by the second named defendant, who appears as a litigant in person, and by the third named defendant who is represented by solicitor and counsel. 3. The principles applicable to a request for summary judgment have been considered by the Superior Courts in a number of cases in recent years, and are now well known. In the seminal case of Aer Rianta c.p.t. v. Ryanair (No. 1) [2001] 4 IR 607, Hardiman J. commented as follows at 623:-
5. Accordingly, the test I will apply is that referred to by Hardiman J. Unless it is very clear that a particular defendant has no defence then leave to defend will be granted to him, only if it is very clear that one or other defendant has no defence will summary judgment be granted. 6. The factual background to the present application is that as I have indicated all three defendants were directors and shareholders of Kapada Limited, a company involved in project management in the construction sector. By letter of sanction dated the 2nd May, 2007, the plaintiff agreed to extend to Kapada Limited an overdraft facility of €50,000 and a loan facility of €140,500. The security for those facilities was a joint and several letter of guarantee from all three defendants limited to €190,500. The defendants all signed the letter of sanction to indicate Kapada Limited’s acceptance of the facilities and ratified that acceptance at a meeting of the directors on the 15th May, 2007. The defendants all executed the agreed joint and several guarantee on the 2nd May, 2007. 7. By letter of sanction dated the 5th December, 2007, the plaintiff agreed to extend to Kapada Limited a further loan facility of €191,671. The plaintiff also continued to provide Kapada Limited with an existing overdraft facility of €50,000. The security for these facilities was a further joint and several letter of guarantee from all three defendants, this time limited to €250,000. The defendants all accepted these facilities by way of a form of acceptance signed on the 10th December, 2007. The plaintiff now seeks to rely on the joint and several guarantee dated the 11th December, 2007, which was executed and signed by all three defendants. The Second named Defendant Independent Legal Advice
10. The fact that Mr. Donlon did not have independent advice, assuming in his favour that was indeed the situation, does not provide even an arguable defence. Signature not witnessed 12. Quite simply there is no requirement as a matter of law for a guarantee to be witnessed. This issue cannot provide even an arguable defence. The Guarantee is not under Seal Consumer Protection Code 2006 Possible Counterclaim 16. The threshold to be crossed before leave to defend would be granted is low. However, low as it is, it has not been crossed by Mr. Donlon. To use the language of Hardiman J. it is in my view “very clear” that Mr. Donlon has no defence and that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment. The Third named Defendant 18. In the case of Tedcastle McCormack and Company v. McCrysta,l (Unreported, High Court, Morris J., 15th March, 1999), Morris J. having considered the House of Lords decision in Saunders v. Anglia Building Society [1971] A.C. 1039, concluded that a person seeking to raise a defence of non est factum must establish:-
(b) That the mistake was as to the general character of the document as opposed to the legal effect; (c) That there was a lack of negligence i.e. that he took all reasonable precautions in the circumstances to find out what the document was.” 20. In the supplemental affidavit, he refers to the fact that he suffers from depression and that he doubts the extent to which he fully understood what he was signing. He says that he looked through the guarantee and understood the essential nature of the document and that it was a guarantee. He says that he saw the phrase “joint and several” and understood that there were three separate guarantees by Damian Donlon, Karl McKenna and by himself and that he understood that the word “joint” referred to the fact that there were three individuals involved. He says that he cannot remember whether or not he read paragraph 20 of the guarantee at the time, but that since the commencement of the proceedings, he has read the whole guarantee repeatedly and that he is confident that without an explanation he would have understood that he was guaranteeing only a third of Kapada’s borrowing. 21. It seems to me, that at this stage of the proceedings it is proper to take the affidavits sworn by Mr. Copeland entirely at face value, and to approach Mr. Copeland’s defence at its high water mark and this I will do. However, even on that basis and reminding myself that there is only a low threshold to be crossed, it seems to me that the difficulties facing Mr. Copeland are formidable. He realised that he was signing a guarantee, that was the general character of the document. It seems to be that whether the guarantee was a joint guarantee or a joint and several guarantee fell within the ambit of the legal effect of the document. 22. Reminding myself that it is not sufficient for liberty to defend to be withheld that the success of the defence suggested is improbable and on that basis being prepared to concede the possibility that it is arguable that there was a radical or fundamental difference between what he signed and what he thought he was signing then it still seems to me that there was such a degree of carelessness on the part of Mr. Copeland in signing the document that he cannot now repudiate what he signed. He was a director of a company, he says that he looked through the document, but that he cannot say whether he read paragraph 20. However, on his behalf, it is said that whether he read paragraph 20 or not is not of any great significance because he had sworn that if he did read it, he would have misunderstood it. 23. Paragraph 20 is in these terms:
25. In ACC Bank plc v. Kelly [2011] IEHC 7, (Unreported, High Court, Clarke J., 10th January, 2011), Clarke J. commented at para. 7.3:
27. The plea of non est factum is only rarely invoked successfully. Why this is so was explained by Donovan L.J. in Muskham Finance Limited v. Howard [1963] 1 Q.B. 904. There he observed at 912:-
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