BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Supreme Court |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Southern Pacific Securities 05-2 Plc v Walker & Anor [2010] UKSC 32 (07 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2010/32.html Cite as: [2010] 1 WLR 1819, [2010] Bus LR 760, [2010] UKSC 32, [2010] Bus LR 1396, [2011] 1 All ER (Comm) 164, [2010] 4 All ER 277, [2010] WLR 1819 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2010] 1 WLR 1819] [Help]
Trinity Term
[2010] UKSC 32
On appeal from: [2009] EWCA Civ 1176
JUDGMENT
Southern Pacific Securities 05-2 Plc (in substitution for Southern Pacific Personal Loans Limited) (Respondent) v Walker and another (Appellants)
before
Lord Hope, Deputy President
Lord Walker
Lord Brown
Lord Mance
Lord Clarke
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
7 July 2010
Heard on 13 May 2010
Appellant Richard Mawrey QC Adrian Salter Matthew Richardson (Instructed by Turner Coulston) |
Respondent Nicholas Elliott QC William Edwards (Instructed by Rosling King LLP) |
LORD CLARKE (delivering the judgment of the court)
Introduction
The agreement
"Payments You must repay the Amount of Credit together with any amounts financed under this Agreement with interest by making the Monthly Payments…."
Clause 15 of the LENDING CONDITIONS provides:
"We will charge interest on the money you owe us (which includes the Loan, interest and Expenses) at the Interest Rate. …"
The issue
The Act and the Regulations
"9 Meaning of Credit
(1) In this Act 'credit' includes a cash loan, and any other form of financial accommodation.
(4) For the purposes of this Act, an item entering into the total charge for credit shall not be treated as credit even though time is allowed for its payment.
20 Total charge for credit
(1) The Secretary of State shall make provisions containing such regulations as appear to him to be appropriate for determining the true cost to the debtor of the credit provided or to be provided under an actual or prospective consumer credit agreement (the 'total charge for credit'), and regulations so made shall prescribe –
(a) what items are to be treated as entering into the total charge for credit, and how their amount is to be ascertained;
(b) the method of calculating the rate of the total charge for credit."
By section 189, unless the context otherwise requires, 'credit' is to be construed in accordance with section 9.
"Except as provided by regulation 5 below, the amounts of the following charges are included in the total charge for credit in relation to an agreement:
(a) the total of the interest on the credit which may be provided under the agreement;
(b) other charges at any time payable under the transaction by or on behalf of the debtor or a relative of his whether to the creditor or any other person."
Discussion
"For the purposes of this Act, an item entering into the total charge for credit shall not be treated as credit even though time is allowed for payment (unless interest is charged, in which case it shall be treated as credit)".
There is in our judgment no warrant for the addition of the words in italics. We agree with the conclusions of Mummery LJ at paras 34 and 35: in particular that the borrowers' submissions treat interest as a necessary feature or indicator of credit, which it is not, and that it was not the function of section 9 to prohibit anything but rather to supply a special statutory meaning to the core concept of credit in the Act and to distinguish it from the charge for, or cost of, credit.
"It is apparent from these two considerations that section 9(4) must be applied without too narrow an interpretation of the word 'item'. If a charge for credit is correctly recognised in accordance with the detailed regulations to which I have referred then any cash loan or other financial accommodation made or afforded by the creditor to the debtor for the purpose of discharging the liability for that charge should not be treated as part of that credit to which the total charge for credit relates. It may be, though it is unnecessary to any decision in this case, that the loan made to pay the charge is itself a separate credit which should be made the subject of a regulated agreement to which the Act applies, whether as a linked transaction within section 19 or otherwise."
CONCLUSION