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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 >> Yin & Ors v 174 Law Solicitors Limited [2023] EWCA Civ 13 (13 January 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/13.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 13 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
His Honour Judge Hodge KC (sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
and
SIR CHRISTOPHER FLOYD
____________________
YEE SHI YIN and others |
Claimants/Appellants |
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- and - |
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174 LAW SOLICITORS LIMITED |
Defendants/ Respondents |
____________________
Jonathan Seitler KC and Michael Bowmer (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 7 & 8 December 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Newey:
"It is apparent that the release of funds is currently blocked by reason of a mix up over the securitisation of the titles. I am aware of the fact that it is in everybody's interest to resolve this without delay and for this reason I have the following [on] proposals:
1. David Roberts will forthwith make application to the Land Registry to register the Buyer Company Charge
2. Notwithstanding the fact that the Buyer Company Charge will sit on the register as a second charge, the Buyer Company will permit release of funds on the following conditions:
(i) That North Point Buyers (Pall Mall) Limited have confirmation that all funds so far released by Bridging Finance Limited have been used exclusively for purposes set out in Clause 5 of the unit sale agreements
(ii) That North Point Buyers (Pall Mall) Limited receive confirmation from Bridging Finance Limited that:
(a) The securitisation of the Pall Mall titles by North Point (Pall Mall) Limited is, and will continue to be, limited to funds drawn down by North Point (Pall Mall) Limited exclusively for the purposes set out in Clause 5 of the Pall Mall Unit purchase Agreements
(b) That all funds drawn down in the future by reason of such security will be paid into the North Point Buyers (Pall Mall) Limited stakeholder account held by David Roberts & Co
(c) That North Point (Pall Mall) Limited has no guarantee to Bridging Finance Limited nor will Bridging Finance Limited seek such a guarantee in the future for any borrowing relating to any other Development such that their securitisation of the Pall Mall titles is ring fence to such titles.
(iii) That David Roberts and Aimee Tsang in their capacity as a Directors of North Point Buyers (Pall Mall) Limited ratify these proposals."
"174 and the buyers, acting by Ms Tsang (and Mr Sewell), at all times conducted their mutual dealings on the basis of releasing the deposits against the supervisor's certificates notwithstanding the fact that, on the register of title to the development, BFL had a first-ranking legal charge. It would be grossly unfair for the claimants to be allowed now to go back on that shared and communicated assumption and to sue 174 for releasing their deposits in precisely the way that had been agreed."
Stakeholder contracts
"There is first the bilateral contract between the two principals which contemplates two possible alternative future events and by which the parties agree to pay a sum of money to a stakeholder to abide the happening of one or other of them. In the present case it consisted of a series of written contracts for the sale of land, and the relevant events were the failure of the contracts by the repudiatory breach of one party or the other. The second contract is the tripartite contract which results from the deposit of the money with the stakeholder on terms that he is to keep it until one or other of the relevant events happens and then pay it to one or other of the parties accordingly. The stakeholder is a party to the second contract but not the first. His rights and obligations are not normally expressly spelled out. They are implicit in the transaction itself, and must be discovered, not by implying terms, but by analysing the relationship of the parties which arises from the deposit of the money."
The contracts in the present case
The sale agreements
"5.0 DEPOSIT RELEASE
5.1 The Deposit together with the Instalment Payments shall be paid to the Seller's Solicitor to be held as Stakeholder to the order of the Company and released by the Seller's Solicitor in the manner and on the terms;
5.1.2 to pay the following items:
5.1.2.1 all sums as are required:
to enable the Seller to purchase the Estate, and to repay any money loaned to the Seller to enable the Seller to purchase the Estate as they fall due for payment, and
to pay professional fees incidental to the purchase of the Estate and exchange of this Agreement, and
pay all costs and professional fees incidental to the incorporation and registration of the Company and the management Company, preparation and filing of accounts, returns and all Companies House and HMRC requirements.
5.1.2.2 all commissions professional fees and other payments reasonably ancillary to the marketing and sale of the properties on the Estate
5.1.2.3 all commissions fees and payments incidental to the program of works to develop the Estate and the buildings thereon including the building in which the Property forms part and certified in certificates issued by the Supervisor such payments to be made within 5 working days of receipt of a copy of the Supervisor's Certificate
5.2 Save for payments certified under clause 5.1.2.3 the payments shall be made on the production of the relevant invoice, account, fee note or voucher and the Buyer acknowledges that the Seller's Solicitor shall not be required to enquire into or verify the accuracy appropriateness or authenticity of same or the certificates issued by the supervisor SAVE and it is agreed that any payment pursuant to this Clause shall not be made until the transfer of the Property to the Seller has been completed and evidence of the registration of such transaction and of the Legal Charge as a first Legal Charge (or that such registrations are pending) is produced to the Buyer or his solicitor or agent
5.3 The Buyer hereby irrevocably authorises the making of the payments referred to in Clause 5 on the terms herein set
5.4 If during the course of the construction of the Development the Seller requires additional funds to enable the continuation of the Sellers Works and being unable to raise such funds from Buyers but is able to finance those costs from a third party lender then in such case the Company will consent to the creation of a prior legal charge with priority limited to the monies thereby secured in favour of such lender upon the following terms:
5.4.1 Such funds as are raised are paid direct to the Sellers Solicitors and retained and released in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement
5.4.2 the terms of such loan are approved by the Company
5.4.3 such loan does not delay restrict or prevent the completion of the sale of the Property to the Buyer in accordance with the terms of this Agreement"
"This Agreement and any documents annexed to it constitute the entire agreement and understanding of the parties and supersede any previous agreement between them relating to the subject matter of this Agreement."
The stakeholder contracts
"True it is that the buyers' deposits are paid to, and held by, the seller's solicitors, as stakeholder, to the order of the buyer company, in accordance with the terms of clause 5 of the sale agreements; but the individual buyers have an interest in seeing that those terms are properly observed. They must therefore have the necessary entitlement, and standing, as parties to the stakeholder contract, to enforce its terms."
The contractual issue
Introductory
The Judge's approach
"Although 174 held the purchasers' deposits to the order of the buyer company, the clear wording of clause 5 was to impose constraints upon the stakeholder's entitlement to release those deposits, even if authorised to do so by the buyer company. They could only be released to pay the items set out in sub-clause 5.1.2, and then only after: (1) the transfer of the property to the seller has been completed, and (2) evidence of the registration (a) of such transfer and (b) of the Legal Charge in favour of the buyer company as a first legal charge (or that such registrations were pending) had been produced to the buyer or his solicitor or agent. So far as the purpose for which 174 might release the buyers' deposits is concerned, clause 5 makes it clear that payments under sub-clauses 5.1.2.1 and 5.1.2.2 were to be made on the production of the relevant invoice, etc whilst those under sub-clause 5.1.2.3 were to made against receipt of a copy of the supervisor's certificate, and 174 was not required to enquire into or verify the accuracy, etc of the same. In my judgment, on the clear wording of the saving provision at the end of clause 5.2, it was ATC, as the buyers' solicitor, which had the express authority to determine whether sufficient evidence of the registration of the transfer of North Point to [the Developer] and of a first legal charge in favour of the buyer company (or that such registrations were pending) had been produced. This was not a matter about which 174 had independently to satisfy itself."
"[Counsel for the claimants] was quite right to point out that it was 174, and not the buyer company, that was authorised to release the deposits; but I do not agree that it was for 174 to satisfy itself as to the registration of the first legal charge. In my judgment, on the wording of the saving provision in clause 5.2, it was sufficient for ATC, as the buyers' solicitor, to do so. Once ATC was satisfied with the registration of the Legal Charge in favour of the buyer company as a first legal charge, in my judgment 174 was authorised to release the buyers' deposits against appropriate invoices and supervisors' certificates, etc."
i) 174 were not entitled to release money otherwise than to pay items specified in clause 5.1.2. Authorisation by the Buyer Company of a payment would not of itself allow 174 to make it; but
ii) It was for ATC, not 174, to satisfy themselves that the proviso to clause 5.2 was met.
The parties' submissions in outline
Assessment of the Judge's approach to clause 5.2
174's alternative case
Conclusion
Estoppel by convention
Overall conclusion
Lord Justice Warby:
Sir Christopher Floyd: