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Jersey Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Ansbacher v HSBC Bank PLC [2007] JCA 228 (04 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2007/2007_228.html Cite as: [2007] JCA 228 |
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[2007]JCA228
COURT OF APPEAL
4th December 2007
Before : |
Sir Philip Bailhache, Kt. Bailiff,
President; |
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Between |
Ansbacher (Channel Islands) Limited (Ansbacher) |
Appellant |
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And |
HSBC Bank PLC |
Respondent |
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In the matter of the Representation of HSBC Bank PLC (HSBC) in respect of the Degrevement of Mark and Selina Burby.
Appeal from the Judgment delivered by the Deputy Bailiff, sitting alone as a Judge of the Royal Court, where he ruled in favour of a representation brought by HSBC Bank PLC.
Advocate M. J. Thompson for the Appellant.
Advocate J. Harvey-Hills for the Respondent.
JUDGMENT
VOS JA:
Introduction
1. The Deputy Bailiff held that a lender, who obtains a judicial hypothec by registering the acknowledgment (reconnaissance) of a debt at the Public Registry, and later obtains a further judicial hypothec by registering a judgment for the repayment of the same debt, loses the benefit of the first hypothec, and thereby loses priority for his debt over the holders of intervening registered hypothecs.
2. The case raises two issues: first, the proper construction of Articles 13 and 16 of the Loi (1880) sur la propriété foncière (the "1880 Law"), as amended; and secondly, the practical effects of the possible constructions of these Articles. It appears that these questions have never before been the subject of judicial decision in the Jersey Courts.
3. The question of construction is primarily concerned with the proper meaning of the, apparently simple, words , and :-
(i) as they are used in Article 16 of the Loi (1880) sur la propriété foncière (the "1880 Law"), as it was amended by the Loi (2005)(Amendement No 5) sur la propriété foncière, and
(ii) as they were used in Article 13 of the 1880 Law before it was amended by the Loi (2000)(Amendement No 4) sur la propriété foncière.
4. It is not really disputed that the understanding of Jersey lawyers down the ages - and certainly since the enactment of the 1880 Law - has been that it was not possible to hold two judicial hypothecs in respect of the same debt although it is fair to say at the outset that it has always been known that this was a moot point.
5. Equally, the adverse effects of the Deputy Bailiff's construction on the lender, can easily be ameliorated if the lender holding the original judicial hypothec, who obtains judgment in respect of his debt, refrains from registering his judgment for payment of the debt at the Public Registry, and moves directly to an enforcement procedure such a dégrèvement (translated cumbersomely as "discumberment").
Hypothecs generally
A hypothec in Jersey law is a As the Jersey Law Commission's consultation paper of May 2006 put the matter: , being an accessory right in rem attaching to a debt or obligation.
7. We are concerned in this case only with hypothèques judiciaries (or judicial hypothecs), which are dealt with in articles 12-16 of the 1880 Law. The judgment or act underlying a judicial hypothec may be of two kinds. It may either be for reconnaissance (acknowledgment) of a debt, or for the payment of a debt. This case concerns the registration of judicial hypothecs following both underlying acts, namely a reconnaissance and a judgment on a debt.
8. There are, however, two other kinds of hypothec under the 1880 Law, namely hypothèques légales (legal hypothecs) and hypothèques conventionnelles (conventional hypothecs). Conventional hypothecs (dealt with in articles 17-29 of the 1880 Law) can be hypothèques simples, which are created by an agreement between the parties and can, in theory, but not commonly in recent practice, be used to secure the borrowing for the purchase of real property. Legal hypothecs are dealt with in articles 6-11 of the 1880 Law.
9. Article 2 of the 1880 Law provides:
The advantages conferred by a hypothec are then listed in Article 2 as:-
(i) Preferential payment in the debtor's insolvency according to .
(ii) The right to take a tenancy of the hypothecated property in a décret or dégrèvement.
(iii) The right to follow the property into the hands of a third party in the case of a deficiency of assets.
The facts
10. I gratefully adopt the description of the facts succinctly set out by the Deputy Bailiff in his judgment at paragraphs 2 to 10, as follows:
The provisions to be construed
11. It is common ground that Article 16 of the 1880 Law (as amended) must be construed in the light of article 13 as it stood when it was enacted. It has since been amended to remove the words , as can be seen from the following extracts.
12. Article 12 provides simply that a judicial hypothec results from a judgment or act of the Court:
13. Article 13 deals with acts or judgments creating judicial hypothecs over either all immovable property (or a specified property) of the debtor. It originally provided as follows:-
14. Article 13 (as amended in 2000) provides as follows:-
15. Article 16 (as amended in 2005) deals with priority. It is interesting to note that it has always referred to both judicial and legal hypothecs, but not conventional hypothecs. In essence, it provides that when a debt is extinguished, or when a hypothec loses its date by the registration of a subsequent act or judgment, as follows:
Arguments as to construction
16. Thus, Article 16 of the 1880 Law explains the circumstances in which the holder of a hypothec must cause it to be removed from the Public Register. Two circumstances are set out: first, the extinction of the debt; secondly, the registration of a subsequent act or judgment. But the subsequent act or judgment will only necessitate the removal of the earlier hypothec if it is .
17. Advocate Thompson, for Ansbacher, argued that these words should be construed as meaning "in the same suit" or "in the same action" or "in the same proceedings", and that the 2002 Ansbacher hypothec did not arise in the same suit, action or proceedings as the second Ansbacher hypothec. Support for this contention can be gained from the fact that in various English language translations of the 1880 Law has been translated as "suit" or "proceedings". It is, of course, common ground that the action for the recovery of the debt in 2006 was indeed a different suit from the one in which the acknowledgment of the debt was given resulting in the 2002 Ansbacher hypothec.
18. If he is wrong in his first submission, Advocate Thompson points out that judicial hypothecs can be created in two ways: by an act or judgment or by a "reconnaissance", and he submits that the registration of a later judgment cannot be as an earlier reconnaissance.
19. Advocate Thompson at first conceded that a bank, which lends £100,000 to customer secured by a judicial hypothec, and then lends a further £50,000 secured by an acknowledgment of £150,000, must remove the earlier hypothec, because the later hypothec is a variation of the original acknowledgment of indebtedness, and therefore all part of the same procedure and process. For the purposes of his first submission, however, he later withdraw that concession, realising that it made his preferred construction of the words almost impossible.
20. At the end of oral submissions, the Court asked for written submissions on the provenance of the word
21. Advocate Harvey-Hills, for HSBC, started his oral argument by suggesting that Under inquiry from the Court, however, he agreed that "Whole judicial process associated with the debt" might be a more precise formulation. should be construed as meaning the "whole process of recovering the debt".
The proper construction
22. The Dictionnaire de Ferriere Nouvelle Edition, Tome Seconde, of 1787 defines This definition seems to indicate a procédure is an entire process from beginning to end. as meaning
23. In my judgment, however, the key to the correct meaning of the word Article 13 refers first to an "action" when it says that all acts or judgments rendered in any "action" for the recovery or acknowledgment of any bond, claim or other debt shall confer on the party obtaining it a judicial hypothec. is to be found in the original Article 13, rather than in Article 16.
24. Article 13 then has a proviso, which is crucial to an understanding of the way in which the word is used in the 1880 Law. The proviso reads: . So, such act or judgment, if there is only one in the , must be registered. And if there is more than one, one of them must be registered.
25. If the legislature had intended that It is far more likely, in my judgment, that the legislature was referring to the whole judicial process beginning with the act or judgment of the Court creating or acknowledging the existence of an obligation or debt, and ending with the extinction of that obligation or debt. A hypothec, it is to be recalled, is an accessory right which must attach to an obligation or debt and the must relate to that obligation or debt. should mean "action", it would surely have used that word as it did a few lines before when describing how judicial hypothecs arise.
26. In Article 13, this construction is made even more probable by the fact that the proviso alludes to the possibility of two hypothecs arising in the same Such a possibility would only have been realistic in 1880 if it were referring to the whole judicial process rather than a single court proceeding, action or suit. .
27. When one then comes to Article 16, with the benefit of a proper understanding of Article 13, the meaning is transparent. There, the legislature is simply saying that, when a hypothec has lost its date by reason of extinction of the debt or by reason of the registration of another act or judgment in the same the first hypothec must be removed is there referring to the whole judicial process affecting the debt or obligation in question.
28. In effect, if there is a single underlying obligation or debt, the law provides that there can be only one judicial hypothec securing such a debt or obligation, because the earlier hypothec loses its effectiveness upon the registration of the later act or judgment given within that judicial process.
29. In the result, I am not persuaded that the use of the word "
30. My preferred construction has, as I have said, the benefit of according with the long-standing understanding of Jersey lawyers. The importance of such long-standing understanding in a field such as the present, which affects title, can be seen, for example, in Re Barker [1985-6] JLR 196 per Hoffman JA at page 191. It is also supported by the Jersey Law Commission's May 2006 consultation paper on "Security on Immoveable Property", which reports at paragraph 17.7 that:-
31. Advocate Thompson argued that the procedure for acknowledgment of an obligation in Rule 18/4 of the Royal Court Rules, introduced in May 1985, supported his construction. He submitted that Rule 18(4) provides the for the original judicial hypothec to be rendered or given, but not the for any subsequent judgment, which cannot, therefore be, . In my judgment, this argument fails to address the true meaning of , simply assuming that it means the same as the English word "procedure" or "proceeding".
32. In addition, it takes no account of the provisions of Rule 18/4(7), which provides that a debt acknowledged in the manner provided for by Rule 18/4(3) shall be deemed to be without prejudice to any other indebtedness of the debtor secured by hypothec. This reinforces the fact that the hypothec is attached to a specific debt, and seems at least to imply, as HSBC submitted, that the registration of a judgment in respect of the same debt secured by an earlier hypothec might affect that earlier hypothec.
The practical considerations
33. There was a strong contest between the parties as to whether or not it made more practical sense for the 1880 Law to be construed as allowing two hypothecs to be registered in respect of the same debt.
34. In my judgment, the practical consequences could not outweigh the proper meaning of the 1880 Law construed on normal principles. But there is, nonetheless, much force in the Deputy Bailiff's finding that the Public Registry must have been intended to give a fair and accurate picture of the indebtedness secured against the property of the debtor, and that the existence of two hypothecs for the same date could mislead both current and potential lenders. It is not an answer for Advocate Thompson to say that lenders can make further enquiries to ascertain that the debt secured by the two hypothecs was one and the same. First, when the 1880 Law was enacted, such enquiries would have been far less easy, so the integrity of the register might have been expected to have been regarded as far more important. Secondly, the fact that further enquiries might clear up any confusion caused by the registration of two hypothecs attached to one debt, does not explain why the legislature might have thought such a situation desirable. Indeed, in my view, the thrust of the legislation, seen as a whole, is, as the Law Commission suggested, that one would only expect one judicial hypothec in respect of one debt.
35. The Deputy Bailiff held that Ansbacher's construction would interfere with the intended operation of a dégrèvement, because it gave the creditor two opportunities (rather than one) to take the property. In a dégrèvement, the holders of hypothecs are called in reverse order, and they have to choose whether or not to pay off earlier hypothecs and take the property. Many factors may affect that decision. These may in different cases include the level of earlier debts secured by hypothec and attaching to the property, possibly even the value of other properties to which the hypothec attaches, and the value of the debtor's immoveable property generally. The dégrèvement process is carefully balanced so as to provide as equitable a solution as possible to all creditors. The existence of two hypothecs in respect of the same debt seems to me to provide the possibility that this process will be disrupted in unpredictable and unexpected ways. There is nothing in the 1880 Law which suggests that such disruption was expected or intended. Advocate Thompson's speculations as to whether and when a dégrèvement would be appropriate, and as to the choice between a désastre, a remise de biens and a dégrèvement do not seem to me to overcome these hurdles.
36. Ansbacher's main practical argument, of course, is that HSBC's construction of the 1880 Law works injustice, because the creditor entitled to a first security is displaced by the removal of his earlier hypothec. In my judgement, neither the rules nor the principles applicable to mortgages in English law can be transplanted into the regime established for hypothecs under the 1880 Law. The priority arrangements are wholly different in both principle and practice. Whilst it might seem unjust to an English lawyer that the holder of a first registered charge should have his charge displaced by the subsequent registration of a judgment for the self-same debt, there is in fact no such injustice in Jersey law, because a hypothec is quite different in juridical principle from a mortgage, and is enforced by quite different procedures. As the Deputy Bailiff rightly acknowledged, it is not the proper construction of the 1880 Law that has removed Ansbacher's priority, it is Ansbacher's own mistaken decision to register its judgment in the Public Registry. This was unnecessary and inappropriate, and not required to enable Ansbacher to proceed to a Vicomte chargé d'écrire, and thence to a dégrèvement.
Conclusion
37. I, therefore, hold that the 2002 Ansbacher hypothec has lost its date and, therefore, its priority, by Ansbacher's registration of the later judgment in respect of the same debt. That later judgment was given within the proper construction of Article 16 (as amended) of the 1880 Law. In consequence, Ansbacher was required under the provisions of Article 16 to cause the 2002 Ansbacher hypothec to be cancelled in the Public Registry within one month of the judgment.
38. Accordingly, I would dismiss this appeal.