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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Evans & Anor v Finance-U-Limited [2013] EWCA Civ 869 (18 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/869.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 869 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CARDIFF COUNTY COURT
HH Judge Chambers QC
1SA00250
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
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Paul Evans & Susannah Evans |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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Finance-U-Limited |
Defendant/ Appellant |
____________________
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Mr Neil Levy (instructed by LG Williams and Prichard) for the Appellant
Hearing date : 7th May 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"(g) If a sum calculated under clause 4 of the bill of sale became due and owing from both claimants and the defendant proved in the bankruptcy of the first claimant for the whole of that sum less moneys subsequently received, is it alleged that the second claimant continued to be under the obligations set out in the loan agreement and the bill of sale as if the bankruptcy of the first claimant had never occurred?
(h) If it is so alleged, why is that so?
(i) If it is contended that the obligations under the bill of sale were joint and several please state the difference if any that it makes to any of the answers given in respect of questions (c) to (h) with the reasons why."
"(g) If a sum calculated under clause 4 of the bill of sale became due and owing from both claimants and the defendant proved in the bankruptcy of the first claimant for the whole of that sum less moneys subsequently received, is it alleged that the second claimant continued to be under the obligations set out in the loan agreement and the bill of sale as if the bankruptcy of the first claimant had never occurred?
To a point, yes. It is not suggested that the bankruptcy of the first claimant had never occurred, merely that it is not material to the position of the second claimant.
(h) If it is so alleged, why is that so?
For the reasons given earlier.
Claiming in the bankruptcy of the first claimant had no consequence to the ability of the Defendant to claim against the second claimant. If, contrary to the position accepted by the Official Receiver that were not the case then the Defendant would have made an application as identified in paragraph 10 of my earlier submissions.
(i) If it is contended that the obligations under the bill of sale were joint and several please state the difference if any that it makes to any of the answers given in respect of questions (c) to (h) with the reasons why.
As indicated above, the only possible construction of the bill of sale is that the obligations were either joint or joint and several. It makes no difference to the outcome of this case which construction is given, but it is assumed that without evidence to the contrary, the obligations were joint."
"On its face the bill of sale does not specify whether the obligations of the grantor (singular) are joint and several where the grantor is more than one person. The claimants' position is that liability is joint but not several. It was open to the defendant to draft a bill of sale that created joint and several liability but in the absence of such drafting there is nothing to indicate that the claimants' liability is anything other than joint. If so, the defendant has only one cause of action. By proving for the whole of the debt in the first claimant's bankruptcy and receiving a dividend, it was no longer open to the defendant to pursue the same debt against the second claimant."
"15. The defendant's case appeared to be that the agreement and liability under the bill of sale continued against the second claimant and that, although her bankruptcy relieved her from the obligation to keep paying the instalments in respect of the car and from the liability to pay any accrued obligations, if she wanted to keep the car, she had to keep the agreement alive and honour the obligations secured by the bill of sale. When she failed to do that there was a default both under the agreement and under the bill of sale and the car became liable to be seized. Damages are recoverable in respect of the period during which the car was wrongfully withheld.
16. During the hearing and afterwards there was much talk of the effect of the law of insolvency but I think that the answer to the case is altogether more basic.
17. The parties are agreed that the claimants jointly entered into the loan agreement and executed the bill of sale.
18. The bill of sale makes no express provision for the position in respect of two or more grantors of the bill. The reference throughout is to "the Grantor". I find it conceptually impossible to divide the positions of the claimants.
19. It seems to me to be clear that when the first claimant became bankrupt there was a default under the bill of sale and the defendant became entitled to seize the car.
20. I cannot see how it could be argued that, in the event of the defendant seizing the car, the agreement and rights under the bill of sale continued against the second claimant. Furthermore I cannot see how it could be argued that, in the event of the defendant not seizing the car, the agreement and the rights under the bill of sale continued against the second claimant. This is because, when the first claimant became bankrupt, there automatically became due and owing the sums calculated in the way set out in the bill of sale. That was the end of it. Both of the claimants were 'the grantor'. Both became liable for the sum due on bankruptcy. There could not be a different sum due from one claimant and another from the other. Furthermore, the defendant must have proved in the bankruptcy of the first claimant on the basis set out in the bill of sale (subject to credit for sums received) and it received a corresponding dividend. All this the defendant appears to accept.
21. When the second claimant became bankrupt the debt for which she had been jointly liable could no longer be enforced against her.
22. There can be no good case to the effect that the defendant's rights under the agreement and the bill of sale continued to subsist against the second claimant who, although free not to do so, chose to continue the payments in order to keep the car and that a right to seize the car arose from her failure to keep up with the instalments, not by reason of her own or the first claimant's bankruptcy.
23. Although the defendant's submissions appear now to put the case upon the basis of the debt that undoubtedly became due and owing upon the default occasioned by the bankruptcy of the first claimant the contemporaneous documents do not support that case. There can be no doubt that, as against the second claimant, the defendant treated the loan agreement as continuing in being until she defaulted in paying the instalments. It was in respect of that default that the default notice was served and the claim for the car was made. But, as stated earlier and correctly accepted by counsel for the defendant, the relevant indebtedness was that which had fallen due and owing on the bankruptcy of the first claimant.
24. I see no reason why, in principle, there would not be scope of an arrangement whereby parties faced with similar circumstances to the present ones should not (subject to statutory regulation) agree that possession of a vehicle should continue if payments were made but that would be a new agreement and not a continuation of the old one. It might also be the case that a loan agreement could make special provision for what would happen if one debtor became insolvent but not the other. But that is not the defendant's case. It was not that there was any agreement between the parties but rather that the defendant was content to let matters rest as long as the second claimant kept making the payments.
25. While it may well be that the defendant did once enjoy a right as against the second claimant to seize the car by reason of her failure to pay the balance of the moneys that fell due and owing under clause 4 of the bill of sale that was never the way in which the defendant treated the matter and I see no reason to suppose that, at this remove, the defendant would now be entitled to put the matter on that basis even if it were to attempt to put its house in order."
"I accept, of course, that those provisions of the bankruptcy code have no direct application to the position in a voluntary arrangement. The effect of the arrangement has to be determined by construing its terms in the context of the events which have happened. But those provisions are, I think, helpful in that they show how the problem which arises in the present case is dealt with under the bankruptcy code. The problem arises where a secured creditor who has not realised his security is required to decide whether to participate in a distribution of assets which are available to meet the claims of unsecured creditors. It is plain that, unless he abandons his security, he can only participate in that distribution on the hypothesis (which may turn out to be wrong) that part of his debt is unsecured; and then only by putting a value on his security so as to quantify that part for the purposes of the calculation and payment of dividend. It would be possible, in principle, to require him to make an irrevocable election; to permit him to participate in a distribution of assets available to meet the claims of unsecured creditors only on the basis that he does abandon his security in respect of that part of the debt which is treated, for the purposes of the distribution, as unsecured. But that is not the solution to the problem which has been adopted in bankruptcy. It has been thought more satisfactory to allow the secured creditor whose security may not be sufficient to satisfy the whole of his debt to participate in a distribution of assets available to meet the claims of unsecured creditors on a provisional basis. If it turns out, on a realisation of the security, that he has been paid too much out of the assets available to meet the claims of unsecured creditors, then he must repay the overpayment; but he is allowed to apply the proceeds of realisation in or towards satisfaction of his secured debt. In the absence of an express term in the voluntary arrangement itself - or agreed between the supervisor and the secured creditor at the time when the creditor claims in the arrangement - I think that the court should be slow to imply a term which would lead to a result which differs in so material a respect from that to which the statutory code would have led in the bankruptcy for which the voluntary arrangement was proposed as a substitute."
"Discharge does not release any person other than the bankrupt from any liability (whether as partner or co-trustee of the bankrupt or otherwise) from which the bankrupt is released by the discharge, or from any liability as surety for the bankrupt or as a person in the nature of such a surety."
"The default notice must be in the prescribed form and specify—
(a) the nature of the alleged breach;
(b) if the breach is capable of remedy, what action is required to remedy it and the date before which that action is to be taken;
(c) if the breach is not capable of remedy, the sum (if any) required to be paid as compensation for the breach, and the date before which it is to be paid."
Since neither Mr nor Mrs Evans had any continuing contractual liability for the payments, a notice based on the non-payment of the January or February 2010 instalment was, in my view, inappropriate. What FUL should have done was to proceed by way of a s.98 notice which is what Mr Murphy suggested in his skeleton argument at trial. Mr Evans (who appeared in person on this appeal) also took the point that he had in fact paid the instalment of £196.33 specified in the notice by 8th March 2010 in compliance with the notice. If this is correct then this might provide another reason why FUL is not entitled to an immediate order for delivery up of the car.
"76 Duty to give notice before taking certain action.
(1) The creditor or owner is not entitled to enforce a term of a regulated agreement by—
(a) demanding earlier payment of any sum, or
(b) recovering possession of any goods or land, or
(c) treating any right conferred on the debtor or hirer by the agreement as terminated, restricted or deferred,
except by or after giving the debtor or hirer not less than seven days' notice of his intention to do so.
(2) Subsection (1) applies only where—
(a) a period for the duration of the agreement is specified in the agreement, and
(b) that period has not ended when the creditor or owner does an act mentioned in subsection (1),
but so applies notwithstanding that, under the agreement, any party is entitled to terminate it before the end of the period so specified.
……"
"(1) The creditor or owner is not entitled to terminate a regulated agreement except by or after giving the debtor or hirer not less than seven days' notice of the termination.
(2) Subsection (1) applies only where—
(a) a period for the duration of the agreement is specified in the agreement, and
(b) that period has not ended when the creditor or owner does an act mentioned in subsection (1),
but so applies notwithstanding that, under the agreement, any party is entitled to terminate it before the end of the period so specified.
…"
Lady Justice Black :
Lord Justice Mummery :