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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 >> Edwards v Edwards & Anor [2010] EWHC 652 (Ch) (11 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/652.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 652 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
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KENNETH RALSTON EDWARDS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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1) VICTORIA MARGARET EDWARDS 2) BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC |
Defendants |
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AND BETWEEN |
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BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC |
Part 20 Claimant |
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- and - |
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1) KENNETH RALSTON EDWARDS 2) VICTORIA MARGARET EDWARDS |
Part 20 Defendants |
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101 Finsbury Pavement London EC2A 1ER
Tel No: 020 7422 6131 Fax No: 020 7422 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
MR EDWARDS in person and MR CAMPBELL as his Litigation Friend
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Crown Copyright ©
MR TROWER QC:
"(1) Any person who is a trustee of land or has an interest in property subject to a trust of land may make an application to the court for an order under this section.
(2) On an application for an order under this section the court may make any such order
(a) relating to the exercise by the trustees of any of their functions (including an order relieving them of any obligation to obtain the consent of, or to consult, any person in connection with the exercise of any of their functions), or
(b) declaring the nature or extent of a person's interest in property subject to the trust,
as the court thinks fit."
In my judgment, it is plain that the consequence of the declaration by His Honour Judge Waxman QC, the accepted fact that the signature on the charge was not that of Mr Edwards, and the fact that there is no issue that Mrs Edwards executed the legal charge is twofold. The first is that the bank has an equitable charge over Mrs Edwards' half-share in Langley Court. Indeed, as I have already indicated, this is admitted by Mr Edwards in paragraph 3 of his defence to counter claim and secondly, that the bank has locus standi to make an application under s.14 of TLATA. In reaching that conclusion I have been taken by Mr Grant to the judgment of the Court of Appeal in First National Bank plc v. Achampong [2003] EWCA Civ 487, which was a case where the legal charge was set aside, because the bank was put on enquiry of the husband's undue influence over his wife, who had also signed the charge. At paragraph 53 of the judgment of Blackburne J, with which Lady Justice Arden agreed, he said as follows:
"53. As I have mentioned the judge did not give any reasons for dismissing the bank's alternative case. Even if, as he found, Mrs Achampong was not bound by the legal charge, it is not correct to say, as Mr Adenekan on behalf of Mrs Achampong contended, at any rate in his skeleton argument, that the legal charge should be regarded as having no effect at all and should be set aside not only as against Mrs Achampong but as against Mr Achampong as well.
54. In my judgment the legal charge, although ineffective as against Mrs Achampong, was apt to achieve two things: first, to create an equitable charge in the bank's favour over Mr Achampong's beneficial share in the property to secure, so far as the share was able, the bank's advance; and, second, as a consequence of the first and assuming that the Achampongs did not already hold as beneficial tenants in common, a severance of the beneficial joint tenancy subsisting in relation to the property. See Ahmed v. Kendrick and anr (1987) 56 P&CR 120 in which the Court of Appeal followed the view of Lord Wilberforce in Williams & Glyn's Bank v. Boland [1981] AC 487 at 507 that Cedar Holding Ltd v. Green [1981] Ch 129 was to be regarded as wrongly decided. In Ahmed v. Kendrick, the husband had forged the wife's signature on a transfer to a purchaser."
I pause to interpose that the issue in Ahmed was similar in its factual background to the situation in this case.
"The Court of Appeal (Slade and Nicholls LJJ) held that the transfer, although ineffective to affect the wife's share..."
I pause to interpose, in that case the person in the equivalent position to Mr Edwards
"...was nevertheless effective on the true construction of section 63(1) to sever the beneficial joint tenancy of the husband and wife in the property and to pass to the purchaser all of the equitable interest under the trust for sale which the husband had power to convey. Similarly here. Section 63(1), which applies as much to a mortgage or legal charge as to a conveyance (or transfer), was apt to ensure that the legal charge in this case was effective to create an equitable charge in the bank's favour over Mr Achampong's beneficial half-share of the property and thus to sever any beneficial joint tenancy of himself and Mrs Achampong in the property. The judge was therefore wrong to dismiss the bank's alternative case."
"Prior to the 1996 Act the courts under s.30 of the Law of Property Act 1925 would order the sale of a matrimonial home at the request of the trustee in bankruptcy of a spouse or at the request of the creditor chargee of a spouse, considering that the creditors' interest should prevail over that of the other spouse and the spouse's family, save in exceptional circumstances. The 1996 Act, by requiring the court to have regard to the particular matters specified in section 15 appears to me to have given scope for some change in the court's practise. Nevertheless, a powerful consideration is and ought to be whether the creditor is receiving proper recompense for being kept out of his money, repayment of which is overdue (see The Mortgage Corporation v. Shaire, a decision of Neuberger J, on 25th February 2000). In the present case it is plain that by refusing sale the judge has condemned the bank to go on waiting for its money with no prospect of recovery from Mr and Mrs Bell and with the debt increasing all the time, that debt already exceeding what could be realised on a sale. That seems to me be very unfair to the bank."
Furthermore, it is also clear that the beneficiary of an equitable charge such as the bank is as much a beneficiary of the Trust referred to in s.15 of TLATA as is the innocent co-owner, such as Mr Edwards, a point made clearly by Sir Christopher Staughton in Bell at paragraph 38.
"So far as section 15(1)(a) is concerned, the house was acquired in 1987 as a home for Mr Fox, Mrs Shaire and Adam, and Mrs Shaire and Adam still live there and still want to live there. It is also true that Mrs Shaire has lived there since 1976, on her own since 1980. However, there is no evidence as to the intention of Mrs Shaire and Mr Fox as to what would happen to the house if Mr Fox died."
I pause to interpose, that is not a relevant consideration in this case.
"Furthermore, Mr Fox changed the basis on which he held his interest when, albeit unknown to Mrs Shaire, he charged that interest first to FNB and then to TMC for a large sum to assist his business.
'In Bankers Trust Co v Namdar (unreported) 18 July 1995, at first instance, Evans-Lombe J is quoted in the judgment of Peter Gibson LJ as saying:
"The subsistence of that purpose" --to provide a matrimonial home for the family – "depended on the continuation of their joint ownership of the property and was brought to an end by the alienation by Mr Namdar of his interest in it by charging that interest to the bank. It may also have been brought to an end by his leaving the property and his wife in circumstances in which it is plain that their marriage was at an end."
"In Barclays Bank plc v Hendricks [1996] 1 FLR 258, 263 Laddie J said:
'...the only collateral purpose upon which Mrs Hendricks could rely, namely that the house was to be retained as the matrimonial home, had ceased to exist both because Mr Hendricks was no longer living there and, more importantly, because Mr Hendricks's interest as coowner had been charged to the bank. He had therefore alienated his interest in the home.'"
"Unfortunately over the years my wife and I have grown apart and just before Christmas 2004 she went to the United States of America where our daughter Lisa was studying and remained there; I remained in England. By this time I had wound down the business at 28a Leicester Square and 229 Lower Clapton Road and had retired. My wife left for the USA again in May 2006. She has now returned to England. We live under the same roof, but remain estranged. Notwithstanding the events described above and the current state of our relationship, I have formulated no plans to divorce my wife and I have not been told that she intends to divorce me. My wife does, however, seem to be remorseful about what she has done."
It is difficult against this evidence, particularly when combined with the fact that Mr Edwards is still apparently pursuing Mrs Edwards seeking damages for deceit and fraudulent misrepresentation, to conclude that much weight should be given to the fact that Langley Court was originally acquired as Mr and Mrs Edwards' matrimonial home.