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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> First Mortgage Securities (No 9) Ltd v Smith & Ors [2005] EWHC 2455 (Ch) (29 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/2455.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2455 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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FIRST MORTGAGE SECURITIES (NO 9) LIMITED | CLAIMANT | |
- v - | ||
TREVOR ALAN SMITH | DEFENDANT ANDPART 20 CLAIMANT | |
PAUL ANTHONY BEDFORD | ||
CAROLINE ANNE BEDFORD | PART 20 DEFENDANTS |
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183 Clarence Street Kingston-Upon-Thames Surrey KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7300 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR SMITH appeared in person
The claimant company did not appear
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Crown Copyright ©
Overview
History of the Matter
(i) In 1987 and 1988 FMS made two loans to Mr and Mrs Smith. In total they were £139,500. The terms were rather complicated. I hope that it will not be necessary for me to analyse them in any detail. There were, as I said in the overview, two legal charges: one for each loan, but both of them related to the house at 34 Park Place, Cheltenham.
(ii) Over the next five years it is at least possible that arrears arose. I state the position in that cautious way because, in more detail, FMS certainly said that arrears arose and, as I will explain, Mr and Mrs Smith did not dispute that at the time. However, Mr Smith has more recently made further investigations which have led him to say that FMS was quite wrong and that on a proper interpretation of the complicated terms of the mortgages there were, or at least there may have been, no arrears. However, the matter was certainly not perceived that way in 1992.
(iii) On 4 February 1992 FMS applied to the County Court for a possession order under the mortgages, and the court made the order in principle. The court was presented with statements of the mortgage account by FMS and the statements undoubtedly showed arrears. Mr Smith says now that they were wrongly calculated. I do not think that I need give a definitive decision myself at this stage about whether they were wrongly calculated or not. I am content to proceed on the basis that they were, or at least might have been. Mr Smith tells me that he opposed the application for a possession order but he was not able, at that stage, to dispute FMS's figures. I interpolate that I cannot possibly blame him for that. I very much doubt that I would have felt myself in any better position to dispute the figures if I had been in his place at the time. In the circumstances the district judge made a possession order, but he suspended it on conditions of a fairly routine nature as to payment of arrears, payment of current instalments and the like.
(iv) Mr and Mrs Smith did not appeal against the possession order.
(v) Although I do not have any detailed information about the passage of events over the next two or three years it seems fairly clear that by 1995 the arrears were not being cleared. Certainly on 18 September 1995 a warrant for possession of the property was issued by the Court in favour of FMS. A detail which I mention now, having noticed it in the papers, is that in a statement of claim of 1998, to which I have not yet come in this account of the facts, there is an averment that a possession order was made on 30 March 1995. I do not think that the papers which I have include a copy of that possession order. The detail probably does not greatly matter. There certainly was the suspended possession order of 1992 to which I have referred. There certainly was the warrant for possession of 18 September 1995, to which I have referred. There may or may not have also been a second possession order made on 30 March 1995.
(vi) Pursuant to the warrant for possession, bailiffs attended at the premises. They took possession of the property and they delivered possession of it to FMS. Mr and Mrs Smith were no doubt unhappy about the position but, as Mr Smith said to me, being law-abiding citizens they had no choice in the circumstances. They handed over the keys of the property and moved out. They have not occupied the property since. There was no appeal by Mr and Mrs Smith against anything which the Court ordered in 1995.
(vii) FMS, having taken possession of the property in those circumstances and thus being a mortgagee in possession, advertised the house for sale at £149,500. In 1995 a Mr Russell purchased the house at that price. He had himself raised a borrowing from a bank. The bank caused the property to be valued. The bank's valuer valued it at £145,000. I mention those details because the papers which I have read include assertions by Mr Smith that the sale by FMS to Mr Russell was in some way colourable and at a demonstrable undervalue. Given the figure at which the house was valued by Mr Russell's lending bank, I do not think that I can accept those assertions. That is not to say that Mr Smith does not sincerely believe them.
(viii) After the sale to Mr Russell there were still arrears owing on the mortgage of just under £60,000, or at least those arrears were still owing on FMS's own figures. By now Mr Smith says that FMS's figures were wrong and, as I have said earlier, I am prepared to assume for the purposes of this judgment that indeed that was or may have been so. Nevertheless FMS was proceeding at the time that there were still arrears owed to it. In March 1998 it commenced a High Court action against Mr and Mrs Smith claiming its alleged arrears. The present case is in fact that High Court action, but it has gone through a considerable number of changes and modifications since March 1998.
(ix) In 2000 or thereabouts Mr Smith, no doubt motivated by the money claim which FMS was still pursuing against him and his wife, commissioned two expert reports, each of which considered and reviewed FMS's calculations of the interest and other liabilities which arose under the mortgages and which therefore constituted the alleged arrears. Both reports said that there were numerous errors in FMS's calculations. I infer that when Mr Smith had had the opportunity to consider those reports he began to explore the possibility of re-opening the possession order or orders which had been made against him several years before, and seeking to claim back possession of the house.
(x) In July of 2002 Mr Russell put the house on the market. In August of 2002 Mr and Mrs Bedford contracted to purchase it from Mr Russell for £474,000. Before the exchange of contracts Mr Smith had contacted the Bedfords' solicitors and warned them that he was proposing to claim that the house still in truth belonged to himself, or to himself and his wife. (I interpolate here that at a date which I do not know exactly Mr Smith suffered the tragedy of the death of his wife. Henceforth I shall refer simply to him.) Reverting to the point that Mr and Mrs Bedford's solicitors had been warned of Mr Smith's claim, I record that the contract of sale between Mr Russell of the one part and Mr and Mrs Bedford of the other contained an indemnity from Mr Russell to Mr and Mrs Bedford should Mr Smith succeed in overturning the title to the property which Mr and Mrs Bedford were acquiring. Mr Smith fairly points out to me that in the circumstances Mr and Mrs Bedford went into the purchase with their eyes open to the risk. However, I think that Mr Smith would accept that his claim to recover possession of the property does not acquire any added strength in law from the existence of the indemnity.
(xi) I return at this point to the High Court claim which FMS had brought against Mr Smith. There have clearly been a number of amendments to the pleadings. Since I only have before me the pleadings in their presently amended form I cannot be certain of the exact details of the amendments: how many there were, when exactly they were made, and matters of that sort. However, I think it is sufficient for me at this stage to record two matters. The first is that Mr Smith filed a defence contesting FMS's claim for further arrears of just under £50,000. The second is that Mr Smith counterclaimed against FMS for a substantial sum of damages. He also counterclaimed for an order setting aside the order or orders for possession, which had been made against him and his wife in 1992 and possibly also in 1995.
(xii) On a date which may appear exactly in the papers but which at present I do not have at my fingertips, FMS was struck off the Companies Register. In consequence of that step a district judge made a consequential order to strike out the counterclaim which Mr Smith had put forward against FMS.
(xiii) Mr Smith appealed against the district judge's order. The matter came before Mr Justice Neuberger. If I have followed correctly there were at least two hearings before Mr Justice Neuberger. At one of them the judge ordered FMS to be restored to the register in order that Mr Smith should be able to pursue his counterclaim against it. A corollary of FMS being restored to the register was that the district judge's order, which had struck out the counterclaim against FMS, must have been set aside. There is no doubt that there is before me today a live counterclaim by Mr Smith against FMS. FMS, having been restored to the register, therefore existed again as a legal person. It still does so exist but it has taken no active part in any of the legal proceedings which have followed down to the stage of the hearing before me today.
(xiv) The second of the hearings before Mr Justice Neuberger of which I know was on 18 December 2003. He was not prepared to proceed solely against FMS on Mr Smith's counterclaim for the possession order, or orders, to be set aside. The judge made the point that third party rights had arisen and he thought it appropriate that the third parties who might otherwise be affected should be joined as parties to the action. It turned out that those third parties were Mr and Mrs Bedford. Mr Smith therefore joined Mr and Mrs Bedford as Part 20 defendants.
(xv) What I have said so far more or less brings matters up to date, but I should add two further points;
(a) Mr Smith has applied for summary judgement against FMS for a large sum of damages which he says is owed to him and for an order setting aside the possession orders of 1992 and 1995. Previously I believe he had simply sought those reliefs in his counterclaim. This step was an application for summary judgment on the counterclaim. FMS has not responded to the application for summary judgment. In those circumstances Mr Smith applies for judgment in default against FMS. That is one of the matters which I have to consider today.
(b) Mr and Mrs Bedford have applied for summary judgment against Mr Smith. They seek summary judgment dismissing his claim for possession against them.
Applicants for Mr Smith's Summary Judgment and Judgment in Default Against FMS
The Third Party Claim Between Mr Smith and Mr and Mrs Bedford
"My first comment is that the monthly calculation is made on a daily basis whereas it should be calculated as 1/12th of a year."
"The computation appears to have been made by an individual not familiar with the terms of the loan."
Again, that is plainly indicating that something had not been handled properly in FMS, but it is in no sense consistent with perjury. Mr Brown had checked a number of calculations at random and there is a section of his report in which he sets out differences between what he considers to be the correct calculation and the calculations in the materials which FMS put before the Court. Again, I am quite prepared to accept the possibility that Mr Brown's calculations are correct, whereas FMS's were not, but the interesting point is that in several respects it appears that the correct figures, as calculated by Mr Brown, were in fact less favourable to Mr Smith than the incorrect figures which appeared in the calculations which FMS put before the Court.
"11.1 The Schedule of Mortgage Account attached differs extensively from the Lender's Statement of Account. Identifiable differences are listed in paragraph 7, and all seem to arise from insufficient knowledge of the terms of the loans and incorrect arithmetical application within the spreadsheet."
There is Mr Brown's analysis of what has gone wrong. FMS's staff who prepared the calculations did not understand the terms of the loans well enough. Further, they made arithmetical errors. In the last paragraph of the summary Mr Brown says this:
"11.9 The terms of the loans are sufficiently complex that the lender, a professional mortgagee, could not interpret them. It is unlikely that the borrowers could have calculated the position of their account, but if they relied on the figures from the Lender's Statement of Account they would have been misled from the first month onward."
(i) The starting position is that FMS undoubtedly had valid mortgages over the house. Even if FMS had miscalculated the arrears and even if it had miscalculated them dishonestly, which is not something which I am prepared to infer, that could not change the position that the mortgages themselves were validly created.
(ii) The mortgage deeds undoubtedly contained powers of sale exercisable by the mortgagee. Thus the sale to Mr Russell was made under powers of sale in the deeds.
(iii) That attracted the operation of section 104 of the Law of Property Act 1925. It is convenient to take two subsections in reverse order. Section 104(3) provides:
"A conveyance on sale by a mortgagee, made after the commencement of this Act, shall be deemed to have been made in exercise of the power of sale conferred by this Act unless a contrary intention appears."
No contrary intention appeared, I assume, in the case of the sale to Mr Russell. Therefore Section 104 operates on the basis that the conveyance of the house by FMS to Mr Russell was a conveyance in exercise of the power of sale conferred by the 1925 Act. That takes me to Section 104(2):
"(2) Where a conveyance is made in exercise of the power of sale conferred by this Act, or any enactment replaced by this Act, the title of the purchaser shall not be impeachable on the ground -
(a) that no case had arisen to authorise the sale; or
(b) that due notice was not given; or
(c) where the mortgage is made after the commencement of this Act, that leave of the court, when so required, was not obtained; or
(d) whether the mortgage was made before or after such commencement, that the power was otherwise improperly or irregularly exercised.
and the purchaser is not, either before or on conveyance, concerned to see or enquire whether a case has arisen to authorise the sale, or due notice has been given, or the power is otherwise properly and regularly exercised, but any person indemnified by an unauthorised, or improper, or irregular exercise of the power shall have his remedy and damages against the person exercising the power."
(iv) What that subsection means in this case is that the sale of the house by FMS to Mr Russell is not "impeachable" by anyone, including Mr Smith, on the ground that the circumstances which would have authorised FMS to exercise the power of sale had not arisen. It is also saying that, if Mr Smith has been harmed by the exercise of the power, his remedy is not to try to set the sale to Mr Russell aside his remedy is to claim damages against FMS. Unfortunately for him FMS is not good for the damages, but that cannot somehow revive for him the possibility of making a claim against Mr Russell, still less against the purchasers from Mr Russell, namely Mr and Mrs Bedford.
(v) Staying at the stage of the sale by FMS to Mr Russell it follows that Mr Russell obtained a good title and became the registered proprietor under the Land Registration Act. I will come later to certain detailed aspects of that Act.
(vi) It is important to note that when FMS sold to Mr Russell the Court order for possession was in force. It may or may not be the case that that Court order was vulnerable to being challenged and, if a challenge succeeded, being set aside either on appeal or in other proceedings. However, the fact of the matter is that, when the sale to Mr Russell was made, the Court order (of the Cheltenham County Court) had not been set aside. Indeed, at that stage it had not even been challenged.
(vii) Mr Smith says that the present case is similar to the decision of the Court of Appeal in Malory Enterprises Ltd v Cheshire Holmes (UK) Ltd [2002] 3 WLR 1. However, in my view the present case is different. In the Malory Enterprises case the company referred to as Malory (UK), which was the company which had behaved dishonestly in the matter, never acquired any title to the property at all and therefore could not confer a good title on Cheshire Homes. In this case I do not accept Mr Smith's contention that FMS was in a position comparable to that of Malory (UK). FMS had a mortgage and it had the benefit of a Court order which, among other things, permitted it to exercise the power of sale. Unless the Court order was set aside before FMS sold the property to Mr Russell FMS clearly had the ability to confer a good title on Mr Russell. The Malory case, unfortunately for Mr Smith, does not help him.
(viii) Further, yet more difficulties arise in Mr Smith's way when I move on to consider the sale from Mr Russell to Mr and Mrs Bedford. At that point Mr Russell was the registered proprietor with title shown on the Land Register. There was no application by Mr Smith to rectify the register by removing the registration of Mr Russell.
(ix) Against that background I turn to Section 20 of the Land Registration Act. So far as relevant, it reads as follows:
"21. In the case of a freehold estate registered with an absolute title a disposition of the registered land … for valuable consideration shall, when registered, confer on the transferee … an estate in fee simple … together with all rights, privileges and pertinences belonging or are pertinent thereto … subject (a) to the encumbrances and other entries, if any, appearing on the register … and (b) … to the overriding interests, if any, affecting the estate transferred or created, but free from all other estates and interests whatsoever."
What the subsection means in this case is that the disposition to Mr and Mrs Bedford of the house, when registered at the Land Registry, conferred on them a freehold title which would be free from all other estates and interests except any encumbrances or other entries appearing on the register and any "overriding interests".
(ix) Mr and Mrs Bedford did become the registered proprietors of the freehold. It is not suggested to me that there are any encumbrances or other entries which are of any relevance appearing on the register. Certainly there are no encumbrances or other entries expressed to be in favour of Mr Smith which appear on the register. Mr Smith has said from time to time that he is entitled to an overriding interest. However, what I think he has overlooked is that the term "overriding interests" is explained in Section 70. There is a long list of interests in Section 70(1) which fall to be regarded as overriding interests. The only one which is of any possible relevance in this case is (g): "The rights of every person in actual occupation of the land …" That, however, cannot assist Mr Smith because, although he and his wife had once been persons in actual occupation of the house, they had ceased to be in actual occupation in 1995. Therefore any claim in relation to the house which they might have had in 2002, which is when the freehold was transferred to Mr and Mrs Bedford, cannot have been an overriding interest. It follows that Mr and Mrs Bedford did not acquire the freehold subject to any claim which Mr and Mrs Smith might have. On the contrary they acquired the freehold "free from all other estates and interests whatsoever", and that means that they acquired it free from the claim which Mr Smith is asserting now.
(x) I record that there is no application by Mr Smith for the Land Register to be rectified. I suppose he could seek to make such an application but I would, in his own interests, discourage him from doing that for reasons which I will not enlarge on at length but which are very fully and clearly explained in Mr Clayton's skeleton of which Mr Smith has a copy. An application to rectify the Land Register by some form of removal of Mr and Mrs Bedford as the registered proprietors would not succeed.
Conclusion
[After hearing further submissions the judge ordered the defendant and Part 20 claimant to pay to the Part 20 defendants costs in the amount of £20,000.]