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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 >> Anfield (UK) Ltd v Bank of Scotland Plc & Ors [2010] EWHC 2374 (Ch) (24 September 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/2374.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2374 (Ch), [2010] 48 EG 86, [2011] 1 All ER (Comm) 929, [2011] 1 WLR 2414, [2010] NPC 96, [2010] 41 EG 126 (CS), [2011] 1 All ER 708, [2010] 3 EGLR 75 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ANFIELD (UK) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC SHAFQAT AHMED SIDDIQUI LONDON SCOTTISH FINANCE LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Charlotte Eborall (instructed by Optima Legal Services Limited) for the First Defendant/Respondent
Hearing dates: 13 July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Proudman:
The issue on the appeal
(1) A registered charge dated 30th June 2000 ("the Halifax Charge") to secure the moneys including the further advances therein mentioned. The Halifax Charge was registered on 29th September 2000. As is evident from earlier versions of the register, and is common ground, the Halifax Charge was granted to the Halifax Building Society. The Bank is registered as the Proprietor of the Halifax Charge and the date of registration is 3rd December 2007. Again it is common ground that the Bank advanced moneys to Mr Siddiqui to discharge the Halifax Charge.(2) A registered charge dated 28th June 2007 registered on 16th July 2007. LSFL is the proprietor of that charge and was registered as such on the same date.
(3) A Unilateral Notice in respect of a pending land action for a charging order registered on 4th October 2007 of which the beneficiary is Anfield, registered as such on the same date. On 3rd April 2008 an equitable charge created by an interim charging order dated 25th March 2008 was registered.
(4) A Unilateral Notice in respect of an advance by remortgage (completed on 1st September 2006) was registered on 1st April 2009 of which the Bank was registered as beneficiary on the same date.
The law
"…the remedy of equitable subrogation is a restitutionary remedy available to reverse what would otherwise be unjust enrichment of a defendant at the expense of the claimant. The defendant is enriched if his financial position is materially improved, usually as here where the defendant is relieved of a financial burden…The enrichment will be at the expense of the claimant if in reality it was the claimant's money which effected the improvement. Subject to special defences, questions of policy or exceptional circumstances affecting the balance of justice, the enrichment will be unjust if the claimant did not get the security he bargained for when he advanced the money which in reality effected the improvement, and if the defendant's financial improvement is properly seen as a windfall. The remedy does not extend to giving the claimant more than he bargained for. The remedy is not limited to cases where either or both the claimant and defendant intended that the money advanced should be used to effect the improvement. It is sufficient that it was in fact in reality so used. The remedy is flexible and adaptable to produce a just result. Within this framework, the remedy is discretionary in the sense that at each stage it is a matter of judgment whether on the facts the necessary elements are fulfilled."
"Seventhly, a lender cannot claim subrogation if he obtains all the security which he bargained for, as in Burston Finance (applying Capital Finance Co Limited v. Stokes [1969] 1 Ch 261) or where he has specifically bargained on the basis that he would receive no such security as in Paul v. Speirway Limited (in liquidation) [1976] 1 WLR 220.
Eighthly, the fact that the lender's failure to obtain the security he bargained for was attributable to his negligence is irrelevant. It does not prevent him from claiming subrogation- see per Lord Hoffmann at 235G in Banque Financière. The effect of that observation was probably impliedly to disapprove observations of Walton J in Burston Finance at 1657C and F. However, Walton J was concerned with a case where the lender obtained the security, but negligently failed to protect himself by registering it, whereas in Banque Financière the lender's negligence was in failing to check that he had obtained the security…
Eleventhly, it is difficult, and may be impossible, for a lender who has obtained security to invoke subrogation where the security he has obtained gives him all the rights and remedies of security to which he claims to be subrogated (see Burston Finance at 1653 D-E), or is a security on which the original security would naturally merge (see Burston Finance at 1653C and per Lord Diplock in Orakpo [v. Manson Investments Limited [1978] AC 95] at 105B-C."
Burston
"What the Court of Appeal there decided, it appears to me, was that it was quite impossible to equate a legal charge which only becomes void subsequently to its creation, and then only to a strictly limited extent, with the kind of charges in Thurstan v. Nottingham Permanent Benefit Building Society [1902] 1 Ch 1 and Congresbury Motors Ltd v. Anglo-Belge Finance Co Ltd [1971] Ch 81 which, for one reason or another, were wholly ineffective from their creation. See also in re Monolithic Building Co [1915] 1 Ch 643 per Lord Cozens-Hardy MR, at p.667 and Phillimore LJ at pp. 667, 668."
"Mr Price urged strongly that if the correct test was indeed… did the vendor obtain all that he bargained for?, then here he did not obtain it, because one of the things for which he bargained was that the defendants would fulfil their statutory duty of registration pursuant to section 96 of the Act of 1948. But this is to confuse substance with formalities. As regards the formality of registration under section 26 of the Land Registration Act 1925, nothing can at the end of the day turn upon this because it was duly effected. But even if it had not been, this is a matter wholly within the plaintiffs' own power, and therefore it could not be suggested that failure to register could have any conceivable effect on the plaintiffs obtaining "all that they bargained for." As regards registration under s, 95, once again, this is undeniably, as pointed out by Harman LJ, within the plaintiffs' own power, although the primary duty was cast on the defendants. Nevertheless, even without such registration, the charge remained effective against the defendants- and still so remains…
So all this demonstrates, to my mind, that there is no doubt that the plaintiffs got what they bargained for. They were merely lax in not taking steps to ensure that what they bargained for remained good against the world." [Emphasis added].
Appleyard
"…C&G did not obtain the security they bargained for. In the two earlier cases, the failure to register the charge under s.95 did not affect the character of the charge obtained by the plaintiff in each case. Non registration under s.95 did not prevent the charge in either case being a legal charge. It merely rendered it 'void' as against a subsequent creditor or liquidator. On the other hand, non-registration of the C&G mortgage at the Land Registry prevented it from being a legal charge: it was merely an equitable charge. Yet it was a legal charge for which the parties bargained. "
Am I bound by Appleyard on the facts of this case?
"It may be (although we doubt it) that the lender's negligent failure to protect or perfect the security should be treated differently."
"The fact that the effect of non-registration under the Land Registration act 1925 of the charge would prevent it from being a legal charge may have been overlooked by Walton J in Burston Finance at 1657C. If so, it is not particularly surprising, given that it was an extempore judgment and his observations on this aspect were purely obiter."
Negligence
The Banque Financière approach
Subverting the policy of the Land Registration Acts?
Decision