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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Kleinwort Benson v. City Glasgow Council [2002] ScotCS 132 (10th May, 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2002/132.html Cite as: 2002 SCLR 714, [2002] ScotCS 132 |
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Kleinwort Benson v. City Glasgow Council [2002] ScotCS 132 (10th May, 2002)
OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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CA143/00
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OPINION OF LORD MACFADYEN in the cause KLEINWORT BENSON LIMITED Pursuers; against CITY OF GLASGOW COUNCIL Defenders:
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Pursuers: Moynihan, Q.C., Weir, Maclay Murray & Spens
Defenders: Glennie, Q.C., Mrs Wolffe, Simpson & Marwick, W.S.
10 May 2002
Introduction
Procedural History
The Pleadings
"1. |
The Proper Law of the obligation to make restitution being English Law, and the sums concluded for being due by the defenders to the pursuers in accordance with the Law of England on the grounds specified in Pleas 2 and 3, decree should be pronounced as concluded for. |
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2. |
The pursuers having made payment to GDC under a mistake in law the pursuers are entitled to restitution of the sums paid as condescended on. |
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3. |
There having been failure (or absence) of consideration for the payments by the pursuers to GDC, the pursuers are entitled to restitution of the sums paid as condescended on." |
"3. |
Esto English Law is the proper law of any obligation incumbent upon the defenders (as statutory successors to GDC) (which is denied) and on the hypothesis that the English Law of Limitation governs that obligation, any claim by the pursuers founded upon an absence of consideration in respect of any sum paid by them more than six years (i) prior to the making of a relevant claim founded upon a failure of consideration, (ii) et separatim and in any event, prior to the service of the present action being time barred in terms of Section 5 of the Limitation Act 1980, the pursuers' averments thereanent should be excluded from probation et separatim their claim to that extent should be dismissed. |
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4. |
Esto English Law is the proper law of any obligation incumbent upon the defenders (as statutory successors to GDC) (which is denied) and on the hypothesis that the English Law of Limitation governs that obligation, any claim by the pursuers founded upon mistake being a new claim and being time barred in terms of Section 35 of the Limitation Act 1980, the pursuers' averments thereanent should be excluded from probation et separatim their claim to that extent should be dismissed." |
The Scope of the Debate
(1) |
The relevant rules of English law setting out the time limits applicable to the pursuers' claim are to be found in the Limitation Act 1980 ("the 1980 Act"). Those rules are rules of limitation (barring the remedy), not prescription (extinguishing the obligation). |
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(2) |
Different rules applied to the pursuers' claim depending on whether it was based on (a) absence of consideration or (b) mistake of law. |
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(3) |
The rule applicable to a claim based on absence of consideration is set out in section 5 of the 1980 Act, which provides: |
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"An action founded on simple contract shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued." |
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It was common ground that that section applied to the claim based on absence of consideration. Authority in support of that proposition was to be found in Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale v Islington London Borough Council [1994] 4 All ER 890 per Hobhouse J at 942c-943e. |
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(4) |
Time starts to run under section 5 when the cause of action accrues. That happens when the plaintiff would be able to issue a statement of claim capable of stating every existing fact which, if traversed, would require to be proved to support the plaintiff's right to judgment (see inter alia Central Electricity Generating Board v Halifax Corporation [1963] AC 785, per Lord Guest at 806). In the case of a claim for recovery of sums paid based on failure or absence of consideration, the cause of action accrues upon the payment of each sum sought to be recovered. |
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(5) |
Section 5 also applies to the claim based on mistake of law, but its effect is mitigated by section 32 of the 1980 Act, which provides: |
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"(1) ... where in the case of any action for which a period of limitation is prescribed by this Act, ... |
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(c) |
the action is for relief from the consequences of a mistake; |
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the period of limitation shall not begin to run until the plaintiff has discovered the ... mistake ... or could with reasonable diligence have discovered it." |
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It was common ground that this section applied to the claim based on mistake of law (see also Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council [1999] 2 AC 349). |
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(6) |
Just as an action cannot be commenced more than six years after the accrual of the cause of action (or, in the case of the claim based on mistake of law, after the date on which the mistake was, or could with reasonable diligence have been, discovered), a new claim, i.e. one involving a new cause of action, cannot be introduced by amendment into an existing action after the expiry of the relevant period of limitation (section 35(3) of the 1980 Act), save in limited circumstances involving the exercise of the court's discretion. |
The Defenders' Initial Submissions
"entitled to restitution of the said sums paid by them to [GDC] ... by virtue of the maxim nemo debet locupletari jactura aliena. Alternatively, the pursuers are entitled to repetition of said sums under the condictio indebiti. The pursuers mistakenly believed that said sums were due to be paid to the defenders. In particular, they believed that the parties (sic) had entered into valid agreements with [GDC]. In the circumstances, it is equitable that the pursuers should recover the sums paid by them to [GDC]. It is inequitable that [GDC] should be permitted to retain said sums."
Those averments were all based on Scots law. The relative plea-in-law was in the following terms:
"1. [GDC] having no power or authority to enter into the said agreements and said agreements accordingly being ultra vires of [GDC] and void, the pursuers are entitled to repayment of the sums paid by them to [GDC] thereunder as condescended upon".
(1) |
setting out the considerations founded upon in putting forward the proposition that English law was the proper law of the defenders' obligation to repay (new article 5 of the condescendence); and |
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(2) |
identifying the pursuers' contentions as to the parties' rights and obligations if English law applied (new article 6 of the condescendence), including |
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(a) |
the contention that the pursuers had an entitlement to restitution on the grounds - |
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(i) |
that there was failure (or absence) of consideration for the payments made by the pursuers, and |
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(ii) |
that the payments were made under mistake of law, in that the pursuers wrongly assumed that they were obliged in terms of the interest rate swap contracts to make the payments; and |
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(b) |
their contentions as to the effect of the English law of limitation, with references to sections 5 and 32(1) of the 1980 Act. |
Paragraph 7 introduced pleas-in-law 1 to 3 quoted in paragraph [8] above.
"Where the substantive law of a country other than Scotland falls to be applied by a Scottish court as the law governing an obligation, the court shall apply any relevant rules of law of that country relating to the extinction of the obligation or the limitation of time within which proceedings may be brought to enforce the obligation to the exclusion of any corresponding rule of Scots law."
Mrs Wolffe made reference to the commentaries on that provision in Johnston on Prescription and Limitation at page 344, paragraph 21.06, and in Anton on Private International Law, second edition, pages 300-304; to Part VII of the Report of the Scottish Law Commission (No. 74) "Prescription and Limitation of Actions: Report on Personal Injury Actions and Private International Law Questions" (1983), which contained the recommendation implemented by the insertion of section 23A into the 1973 Act by the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1984; to the Report of the (English) Law Commission (No. 114) "Classification of Limitation in Private International Law" (1982), which made similar recommendations for English law; and to the resulting English legislation, the Foreign Limitation Periods Act 1984 ("the English 1984 Act"). She drew attention to section 1(4) of the English 1984 Act, which provides that an English court, in applying the limitation rules of another country where those rules involve the exercise of a discretion, "shall so far as practicable exercise that discretion in the manner in which it is exercised in comparable cases by the courts of that other country". She noted the absence of any corresponding provision in section 23A, but did not submit that it should be inferred that in applying that section a Scottish court should adopt a different approach.
"(1) |
For the purposes of this Act, any new claim made in the course of any action shall be deemed to be a separate action and to have been commenced- |
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(a) |
in the case of a new claim made in or by way of third party proceedings, on the date on which those proceedings were commenced; and |
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(b) |
in the case of any other new claim, on the same date as the original action. |
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(2) |
In this section a new claim means any claim by way of set-off or counterclaim and any claim involving either- |
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(a) |
the addition or substitution of a new cause of action; or |
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(b) |
the addition or substitution of a new party; ... |
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(3) |
Except as provided by section 33 of this Act or by rules of court, neither the High Court nor any county court shall allow a new claim within subsection (1)(b) above, other than an original set-off or counterclaim, to be made in the course of any action after the expiry of any time limit under this Act which would affect a new action to enforce that claim. ... |
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(4) |
Rules of court may provide for allowing a new claim to which subsection (3) above applies to be made as there mentioned, but only if the conditions specified in subsection (5) below are satisfied, and subject to any further restrictions the rules may impose. |
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(5) |
The conditions referred to in subsection (4) above are the following- |
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(a) |
in the case of a claim involving a new cause of action, if the new cause of action arises out of the same facts or substantially the same facts as are already in issue on any claim previously made in the original action; ...". |
"The effect of section 35, broadly stated, is that a new claim may be added by amendment notwithstanding that the limitation period has expired at the date of amendment and the new claim if added takes effect from the date of the writ if but only if the provisions of section 35(5) and any other restrictions imposed by the Rules of Court (cf. O. 20, r. 5) are complied with."
In seeking to apply the test set by section 35(5), his Lordship first held that the new claims were different causes of action. He then continued (at 594) with a discussion of the test to be applied in determining whether new claims arise out of the same or substantially the same facts as those already in issue on the previous claim. Since, however, it is common ground in the present case that, if I hold section 35 to be applicable, a proof will be necessary to determine how it should be applied, it is not necessary to enter on that aspect of the matter at this stage.
"In the present case ... [the] averments which radically alter the pursuer's case were added after the expiry of the triennium by adjustment and not by amendment. In my opinion that makes a material difference. With the possible exception of scandalous averments ... the court has no control or discretion over what averments may be added by adjustment. The court can control adjustment by limiting the adjustment period and ultimately by closing the record, but the court does not require to grant leave to add particular adjustments in the way in which leave is required for a minute of amendment. There is no express reference in the [1973 Act] to adjustment, and, in my opinion, ... a pursuer may adjust his pleadings without restriction and without obtaining express leave to do so."
Mrs Wolffe submitted that those observations were confined in their application to cases under section 17, and had no application to the issues raised by section 23A. That was so at least where the Scottish rule corresponding to the foreign rule was of the nature of prescription rather than limitation, or where the foreign law contained rules regulating the making of a late claim. In any event, Mrs Wolffe submitted, the rule in Sellars could have no application in a commercial action where, in terms of rule of court 47.4(2) the ordinary rules regulating adjustment were disapplied, and in terms of rules of court 47.5 and 47.11 adjustment was at the discretion of the commercial judge.
"For reasons which are not at all clear to us, the important question which the defenders sought to raise was not, however, disposed of, as it should have been, at this stage. What appears to have happened is that because the defenders had in their answers to the minute of amendment introduced a new plea in law raising the question of time bar, the Lord Ordinary took the view that the point the defenders wished to make could be explored and resolved in procedure roll. In the result he allowed the record to be amended and sent the case to that roll. That was, we regret to say, an error in procedure because the real question has always been whether the amendment should have been allowed at all."
In due course on the procedure roll the Lord Ordinary dismissed the action on the ground that the late amendment had changed the basis of the action. It was that decision that was reclaimed, and the reclaiming motion was refused. Mrs Wolffe submitted that the actual decision in Greenhorn demonstrated that, whatever the proper procedure may be, the question of whether amendment to introduce a new case after the expiry of the limitation period should have been allowed remains open for determination at a later stage, if it was not addressed at the date at which the motion to amend was made.
The Pursuers' Initial Submissions
"The law of England and Wales shall determine for the purposes of any law applicable by virtue of subsection (1)(a) above [i.e. the foreign limitation law] whether, and the time at which, proceedings have been commenced in respect of any matter; and, accordingly, section 35 of the Limitation Act 1980 (new claims in pending proceedings) shall apply in relation to time limits applicable by virtue of subsection (1)(a) above as it applies in relation to time limits under that Act.
The reasons for the adoption of that rule were discussed in the (English) Law Commission Report (No. 114) at paragraphs 4.18 and 4.19. The provision tended to indicate that English law treated section 35 as a rule of court procedure rather than part of the law of limitation.
The Defenders' Response
(i) |
that no action might be commenced more than six years after the cause of action arose; |
(ii) |
that in general no new claim might be added by amendment to an existing action more than six years after the cause of action arose; |
(iii) |
that, as an exception to (ii), in certain specified circumstances the court might in its discretion allow a new claim to be added by amendment to an existing action more than six years after the cause of action arose; and |
(iv) |
that, if such amendment was allowed, the new claim would be treated for the purpose of the law of limitation as if it had been raised at the same time as the original action; |
it was difficult to see how it was possible to regard part of that package of provisions as forming part of the law of limitation, and another part as not doing so. There was nothing in the language of section 23A to compel the making of a distinction among the various parts of such a package.
The Pursuers' Response
"The rules of prescription or limitation of the lex causae, including any relevant rules of suspension and interruption, should be applied by a Scottish court, however they may be classified for choice of law purposes under the lex causae, to the exclusion of any corresponding rule of Scots law."
Mr Moynihan accepted that rules such as those found in Scots law in sections 6(4) and 19A of the 1973 Act fell within the scope of section 23A. What required to be determined was whether section 35 of the 1980 Act fell within the category of rules covered by section 23A.
Discussion
(i) |
a general rule prohibiting any court from allowing a new claim (of the sort mentioned in subsection (1)(b), including in particular one of the sort mentioned in subsection (2)(a), namely the addition of a new cause of action) to be made in the course of an action after the expiry of a limitation period which would prevent its being made in a new action (subsection (3)); |
(ii) |
a provision authorising the making of rules of court to permit such a new claim to be made in an existing action, but only if conditions specified elsewhere in the section and any other conditions specified in the rules of court are satisfied (subsection (4)); |
(iii) |
a provision specifying the conditions mentioned in paragraph (ii) above (subsection (5)), in terms which permit the new claim involving a new cause of action to be added only if it arises out of the same or substantially the same facts; and |
(iv) |
a provision to the effect that, if in accordance with the provisions already mentioned a new claim is permitted to be made in the course of an existing action, it shall be deemed to be a separate action commenced on the same date as the original action. |
That analysis seems to me to be consistent with what was said by Evans J in Arab Monetary Fund v Hashim at 593 (see paragraph [23] above). The effect of those provisions is, in my view, to lay down a general rule to prevent a party from evading the effect of the ordinary limitation rule by bringing forward a claim based on a new cause of action, which would be time barred as a separate action, in the form of an amendment to an existing action; but to make an exception in favour of new causes of action based on the same or substantially the same facts. In my opinion regard must be had to the substance rather than the mere form of the provisions in question. In my view that package of provisions is in substance an integral part of the law of limitation of actions. Although the exception is to be regulated by rules of court, these are rules of court expressly authorised for the particular purpose, the core content of which is prescribed by the statutory provision. The rules are not ordinary rules of general application which happen to bear inter alia on limitation cases. They are specific rules provided as part of the machinery of the law of limitation. I am therefore of opinion that the whole of section 35 falls within the scope of the phrase "relevant rules ... relating to ... limitation" in section 23A, and falls to be applied in the present case.
Result