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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 >> NDH Properties Ltd v Lupton Fawcett LLP [2020] EWHC 3056 (Ch) (16 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/3056.html Cite as: [2021] PNLR 8, [2020] EWHC 3056 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN LEEDS
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
1 Oxford Row Leeds |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-Chancellor of the County Palatine of Lancaster
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NDH PROPERTIES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LUPTON FAWCETT LLP |
Defendant |
____________________
Jason Evans-Tovey (instructed by DWF Law LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2-5 December 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SNOWDEN :
Introduction
THE WITNESS EVIDENCE
Mr. Nayee
Ms. Nayee
THE FACTS
The early background
The business of BPFL, Amalgamated and Consolidated Finance Limited
"9. Consolidated and [BPFL] are associated companies, with the same directors. Their business model involves contacting persons who have been made bankrupt on a creditor's petition … In essence, the companies' business involves offering to secure the annulment of the bankruptcy order by the advance of moneys on short-term loan, with substantial interest and fees payable by the debtor and the total of the moneys advanced, interest, fees and costs incurred in connection with the annulment secured on the property of the debtor. For this purpose, the equity of the debtor in the property to be charged must be sufficient to cover the ultimate indebtedness. If the debtor secures refinancing of the short-term indebtedness, it is repaid out of its proceeds. If not, and the debtor is unable to repay his or her liabilities to the companies, the security may be enforced."
Mr. Nayee is introduced to BPFL and Amalgamated
"To Whom It May Concern
Dear Sir/Madam,
Please note that I have given formal instructions to:
[BPFL and Lupton Fawcett]
and its agents [sic] to act on my behalf, and to take all necessary steps to stop bankruptcy proceedings. I confirm that the above and its agents may perform a credit search and pass data on to third parties.
Would you therefore please be kind enough to accept this as notice of authority for that purpose and provide information and assist as necessary.
I confirm I have read and accepted the enclosed Terms and Conditions and retained a copy for my records.
Signed,
[space for signature]
Dashrathbai Nayee
Applicant"
"1. Amalgamated Finance Limited (AFL) or any of its linked firms will have the exclusive right for a period of 6 months (unless by mutual agreement such arrangement is terminated) from the date of your authority to act on your behalf in connection with the negotiation of your secured and unsecured creditors and raising finance with a view to settlement "the transaction". In your case assisting with refinancing of property and land. The Bankruptcy Protection Fund Limited will supply the service and co-ordinate what needs to happen.
2. AFL, after confirming the said instructions with you, may, at their discretion, appoint a solicitor from their recommended panel to act on your behalf to secure monies loaned.
3. AFL, BPF or their agents have your full authority to correspond with any parties to obtain any information required in your transaction or refinancing.
4. BPF will immediately arrange sufficient funds for the refinancing in full and repay as much of your registered charge(s) as they deem necessary to effect the securing of the monies provided.
5. AFL/BPF may refer you to an independent mortgage broker who will use their best endeavours to arrange, through their agents, a remortgage of your property (or other transaction which will release monies from your home) for such amount as is required to pay off the full indebtedness to AFL, together with the amount outstanding on any charge on your property and costs incurred herewith, if this is applicable. This is not a guarantee and the responsibility to ensure that any bridging loan advanced is repaid within the specified period is yours (usually 90 days). We cannot guarantee that any repayment method will be available during and at the end of this period. The loan is secured on your property by way of a registered charge. Failure to repay may result in the enforcement of the security which could result in the loss of your home.
6. Fees will include charges and interest associated with the new loan which will be detailed to you prior to the advance being made. There will also be a separate transaction fee which will also be detailed to you in advance.
7. Fees may be charged by other parties during this transaction, the refinancing and the subsequent remortgage process (if required)."
"You have advised BPF that the repayment of the loan will be by a remortgage/secured loan of commercial property if that is not possible you will sell 157-159 Fylde Rd.
The loan is provided by Amalgamated Finance Ltd – linked company.
Where you take up this service, once the annulment is successful you will become liable to pay the charges of the Companies.
The bridging period is for 90 days from the date of the annulment which is provided by AFL.
It is your responsibility to ensure that the loan is repaid within the 90 day period.
The loan is secured on your property by way of a registered charge.
We cannot guarantee that any repayment method will be available during and at the end of this period.
Failure to repay may result in the enforcement of the security which could result in the loss of your home.
For Cancellation Rights please see your Terms and Conditions or visit www.bpfltd.co.uk."
Discussions concerning the involvement of Lupton Fawcett and Mr. Bleakley
"In the same way in which I was required to take the services of Mr. Bleakley, it was also a condition of the funding offered by BPFL that I use the services of their appointed solicitors, [Lupton Fawcett]."
"Dear Paul,
As you are aware, I attended a meeting this morning with [BPFL]. All in all the meeting was very positive, however there were some conditions. I know you are aware of the constraints I am under with the receivers. These now have an offer that we are all in agreement they will push through to exchange and completion ASAP. This would be detrimental to what I am trying to achieve. Therefore the lender has given me a way out of losing my site and possible bankruptcy. However, the Clause [sic] is that they will only lend me the money if they have a clear exit. I have told them that you have been helping me with this but they did not seem too happy with the length of time it's taken. Therefore they would like me to work with Jamie Bleakley who they have experience with and trust to move things to the next stage for me…."
"Stage 1
Stop Begbies selling your site and obtain funding from Chris Holmes.
Stage 2
Refinance the site via bridging finance or a JV Partner… [or via other methods…]
Stage 3
Build commences through to completion."
The email then set out Mr. Bleakley's terms, which included a sentence that,
"…for me to start the work on your behalf for stage 1 only I would usually ask for £2000 upfront fee however I am willing to start the work for the upfront cost of £1000…"
Mr. Bleakley also set out his view of his role as follows,
"My role is not just to obtain finance for you. My role is to give you advice and act in your best interest. I will always try and negotiate the best terms and ensure things move quickly. As I said to your daughter we are not only under pressure to ensure we don't lose the site, we are under pressure that we can get the development built out for the next student year…."
Events leading up to the making of the Loan
"Before we are ready to make the payment, Lupton Fawcett LLP, our solicitors of six years, will be able to confirm that they are holding the required funds."
"You have advised BPF that the repayment of the loan will be by refinancing of the site at 157-159 Fylde Road, Preston, PR1 2XP after the building project has progresses [sic]. Failing this you agree that the site will be sold within the loan period."
"I was not concerned at all as I understood that the documents were prepared by [Lupton Fawcett] who I had retained to act on behalf of NDH and advise NDH. Had there been any immediate concerns that the documents were not in the best interests of [NDH], I would have expected to have been contacted by them to set these risks and concerns out to me prior to signing."
The making of the Loan and subsequent events
ANALYSIS
Implied Retainer
"… As a matter of law, it is necessary to establish that A&W by implication agreed to act for Mr Dean: an implied retainer could only arise where on an objective consideration of all the circumstances an intention to enter into such a contractual relationship ought fairly and properly to be imputed to the parties. In Searles v Cann and Hallett [1993] PNLR 494 the question arose whether the solicitors for the borrowers impliedly agreed to act as solicitors for the lenders. Mr Philip Mott QC (sitting as a deputy judge of the Queen's Bench Division) held that there was nothing in the evidence which clearly pointed to that conclusion. He went on:
'No such retainer should be implied for convenience, but only where an objective consideration of all the circumstances make it so clear an implication that [the solicitor himself] ought to have appreciated it.'
'All the circumstances' include the fact, if such be the case (as it is here), that the party in question is not liable for the solicitors fees and did not directly instruct the solicitors. These are circumstances to be taken into account, but are not conclusive. Other circumstances to be taken into account include whether such a contractual relationship has existed in the past, for where it has, the court may be readier to assume that the parties intended to resume that relationship, and where there has been such a previous relationship the failure of the solicitor to advise the former client to obtain independent legal advice may be indicative that such advice is not necessary because the solicitor is so acting: see e.g. Madley v. Cousins Combe & Mustoe [1997] EGC 63 .…"
"1016. Necessity in this context generally requires demonstrating that the parties have acted in a way which is consistent only with an intention to make a contract. If they would or might have acted the same way in the absence of such a contract then necessity is unlikely to be established. In The Gudermes [1993] 1 Ll.R. 311 at 320 the Court of Appeal approved the following direction given by the Judge (Hirst J):
'In my judgment no implied contract can be inferred unless it is necessary to give business reality to the transaction, and unless conduct can be identified referable to the contract contended for which is inconsistent with there being no such contract; and it is fatal to the implication of such a contract if the parties would or might have acted exactly as they did in the absence of such a contract..'"
"Was there conduct by the parties which was consistent only with [the defendant firm] being retained as solicitors for the Claimants?"
Duty of care in tort
"… The first is whether the defendant assumed responsibility for what he said and did vis-à-vis the claimant, or is to be treated by the law as having done so. The second is commonly known as the threefold test: whether loss to the claimant was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of what the defendant did or failed to do; whether the relationship between the parties was one of sufficient proximity; and whether in all the circumstances it is fair, just and reasonable to impose a duty of care on the defendant towards the claimant … Third is the incremental test … approved by Lord Bridge of Harwich in Caparo Industries v Dickman [1990] 2 AC 605, 618, that:
"It is preferable, in my view, that the law should develop novel categories of negligence incrementally and by analogy with established categories …"
"4. … First, there are cases in which one party can accurately be said to have assumed responsibility for what is said or done to another, the paradigm situation being a relationship having all the indicia of contract save consideration. Hedley Byrne would, but for the express disclaimer, have been such a case. White v Jones and Henderson v Merrett Syndicates Ltd, although the relationship was more remote, can be seen as analogous. Thus, … I think it is correct to regard an assumption of responsibility as a sufficient but not a necessary condition of liability, a first test which, if answered positively, may obviate the need for further inquiry. If answered negatively, further consideration is called for.
5. Secondly, however, it is clear that the assumption of responsibility test is to be applied objectively … and is not answered by consideration of what the defendant thought or intended. Thus Lord Griffiths said in Smith v Eric S Bush [1990] 1 AC 831, 862, that:
"The phrase 'assumption of responsibility' can only have any real meaning if it is understood as referring to the circumstances in which the law will deem the maker of the statement to have assumed responsibility to the person who acts upon the advice."
The problem here is, as I see it, that the further this test is removed from the actions and intentions of the actual defendant, and the more notional the assumption of responsibility becomes, the less difference there is between this test and the threefold test."
"91. In White v Jones the general approach was revisited. Lord Goff, at p. 257a , referred to assumption of responsibility as the test which "as a general rule" determined whether there could be liability under for purely financial loss, but he recognised that the testator's solicitor could not be said actually to have assumed responsibility towards a disappointed beneficiary, pp 262 b – c and 268 a – b. It was only because there would otherwise be a lacuna in the law leading to injustice that he concluded that the House:
"should in cases such as these extend to the intended beneficiary a remedy under the Hedley Byrne principle by holding that the assumption of responsibility by the solicitor towards his client should be held in law to extend to the intended beneficiary who (as the solicitor can reasonably foresee) may, as a result of the solicitor's negligence, be deprived of his intended legacy in circumstances in which neither the testator nor his estate will have a remedy against the solicitor."
92. Lord Browne-Wilkinson, at pp 273g – 274g, addressed the doubts expressed by Lord Griffiths in Smith v Eric S Bush and Lord Roskill in Caparo Industries plc v Dickman by explaining assumption of responsibility as "assumption of responsibility for the task not the assumption of legal responsibility". He said:
"If the responsibility for the task is assumed by the defendant he thereby creates a special relationship between himself and the plaintiff in relation to which the law (not the defendant) attaches a duty to carry out carefully the task so assumed."
On this basis he explained Smith v Eric S Bush and Caparo as cases where there had been "the conscious assumption of responsibility for the task" (p. 274 b), and said that, although the categories of cases of special relationship were not closed, the only two hitherto identified were:
"(1) where there was fiduciary relationship and (2) where the defendant has voluntarily answered a question or tenders skilled advice or services in circumstances where he knows or ought to know that an identified plaintiff will rely on his answers or advice. In both these categories the special relationship is created by the defendant voluntarily assuming to act in the matter by involving himself in the plaintiff's affairs or by choosing to speak."
He recognised that neither of these categories covered the circumstances in White v Jones: p. 275 c. But he considered a duty of care in White v Jones to be justified because "the law in this area has not ossified", because Lord Devlin in Hedley Byrne had himself envisaged that there might be other sets of circumstances in which it would be appropriate to find a special relationship giving rise to a duty of care, and because the case fell within Lord Bridge's statement in Caparo that novel categories of negligence could be developed "incrementally and by analogy with established categories". A duty owed by the negligent solicitor to the disappointed beneficiary was closely analogous with existing categories of special relationship: p. 275 f.
93. This review of authority confirms that there is no single common denominator, even in cases of economic loss, by which liability may be determined. In my view the threefold test of foreseeability, proximity and fairness, justice and reasonableness provides a convenient general framework although it operates at a high level of abstraction. The concept of assumption of responsibility is particularly useful in the two core categories of case identified by Lord Browne-Wilkinson in White v Jones, at p. 274 f-g, when it may effectively subsume all aspects of the threefold approach. But if all that is meant by voluntary assumption of responsibility is the voluntary assumption of responsibility for a task, rather than of liability towards the defendant, then questions of foreseeability, proximity and fairness, reasonableness and justice may become very relevant. In White v Jones itself there was no doubt that the solicitor had voluntarily undertaken responsibility for a task, but it was the very fact that he had done so for the testator, not the disappointed beneficiaries, that gave rise to the stark division of opinion in the House. Incrementalism operates as an important cross-check on any other approach."
"24. In Williams v Natural Life Health Foods [1998] 1 WLR 830, Lord Steyn remarked at p. 837 that there was no better rationalisation for liability in tort for negligent misrepresentation than the concept of an assumption of responsibility. It has therefore become clear that, although it may require cautious incremental development in order to fit cases to which it does not readily apply, this concept remains the foundation of the liability.
25. The legal consequences of Ms Steel's careless misrepresentation are clearly governed by whether, in making it, she assumed responsibility for it towards [NRAM]. The concept fits the present case perfectly and there is no need to consider whether there should be any incremental development of it. Nevertheless the case has an unusual dimension: for the claim is brought by one party to an arm's length transaction against the solicitor who was acting for the other party. A solicitor owes a duty of care to the party for whom he is acting but generally owes no duty to the opposite party: Ross v Caunters [1980] Ch 297, 322."
"In broad terms, a solicitor's duty to his client is to do for him all that he properly can, with, of course, proper care and attention. Subject to giving due weight to the adverb "properly," that duty is a paramount duty. The solicitor owes no such duty to those who are not his clients. He is no guardian of their interests. What he does for his client may be hostile and injurious to their interests; and sometimes the greater the injuries the better he will have served his client."
"33. In a situation such as the present where (to the knowledge of both parties) a solicitor is retained by one party and there is a conflict of interest between the client and the other party to a transaction, the court should be slow to find that the solicitor has assumed a duty of care to the other party to the transaction, for such an assumption is ordinarily improbable. But the special circumstances of a particular case may require a different conclusion to be reached."
"I agree with Lightman J that it is fair, just and reasonable to hold that [the solicitor] did owe a duty of care to Mr Dean. As [the solicitor] knew or should have known, Mr Dean was relying on him, the provision of effective security was of fundamental importance to Mr Dean, and there was on this point a sufficient identity of interest between Mr Dean and [the borrower]. For my part I do not see this as an extension of White v Jones but as an example of the sort of exceptional case contemplated by the Vice-Chancellor in Gran Gelato v Richcliff (Group) [1992] Ch 560, 571–2."
"… the six authorities cited above demonstrate in particular that the solicitor will not assume responsibility towards the opposite party unless it was reasonable for the latter to have relied on what the solicitor said and unless the solicitor should reasonably have foreseen that he would do so. These are, as I have shown, two ingredients of the general liability in tort for negligent misrepresentation; but they are particularly relevant to a claim against a solicitor by the opposite party because the latter's reliance in that situation is presumptively inappropriate."
"In my judgment it was by then obvious, even if it had been no more than conjectural before, that [the lender] was relying upon [the solicitor] to look after his interests so far as the form of the security was concerned."
"My role is not just to obtain finance for you. My role is to give you advice and act in your best interest."
"We are one of a number of firms of solicitors to whom [BPFL] from time to time refer individuals seeking to annul their bankruptcy with the benefit of funds advanced through [BPFL].
Normally, in addition to acting for you, we will also act for [Consolidated] (a company associated with [BPF]) in arranging for their security (usually a charge over your home) to be completed and registered at H M Land Registry."
The letter then included a section headed "Work not covered". This specifically excluded four areas of advice, of which the third was,
"Any advice on the terms of the proposed funding by [BPFL] including any advice on the Loan Facility Letter or the security documents."
"59. Finally, I am concerned at the part played by the solicitors. They were not represented before us, and so I can only express my concerns, but I do not come to any conclusion. Lupton Fawcett were well aware of the standard terms of the agreements sought by the companies. It must, and certainly should, have been obvious to them that for the reasons I have given the transactions with Mr and Mrs Collins were manifestly to their disadvantage. Mrs Collins was their client. I raise the question whether in such circumstances a solicitor can properly avoid a duty to advise his client by excluding that duty from his retainer, as Lupton Fawcett sought to do. Did Lupton Fawcett permit their client to enter into transactions that, it seems to me, they must have appreciated were to her disadvantage? At the very least I think that they should have advised Mrs Collins in the strongest terms to seek advice elsewhere. Instead, their client letter merely pointed out that she was free to seek advice elsewhere. I am not confident that this would be sufficient, however. One should bear in mind that someone in her situation may in practice be unable to afford to consult another independent solicitor. It may well be that, given their on-going relationship with the companies that habitually introduced work to them, they had a conflict of irreconcilable interests."
Causation
Damages
DISPOSAL