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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Carrasco v Johnson [2018] EWCA Civ 87 (02 February 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/87.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 87 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT
AT CENTRAL LONDON
District Judge Langley
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN
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Lorna Carrasco |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Rebecca Johnson |
Respondent |
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The Respondent, Ms Rebecca Johnson, appeared in person and was not represented
Hearing date : 24 January 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN :
Introduction
Factual background
The judgment
(1) The court has a discretion as to the rate to be awarded and the period on which it is payable.
(2) Bank lending rates are much lower now than they were in early 2009 when the loans were repayable.
(3) Interest is not awarded as compensation for damage done but for the claimant being kept out money that ought to have been paid.
(4) The loans were between private individuals. This was not a commercial loan and commercial loan rates were not appropriate.
(5) The Respondent was aware that the Appellant wished to buy out her sister's share in a property and that she needed the £40,000 loan to be repaid to enable her to do so.
(6) The present bank base lending rate was 0.5%. The judgment rate was 8%.
(7) Taking into account all the circumstances of both parties and the findings of fact made, the appropriate rate of interest was 3%.
(1) From 17 February to 4 March 2009: 1%.
(2) From 5 March 2009 to 4 August 2015: 0.5%.
(3) From 5 August 2015 to 20 April 2016: 0.25%.
The grounds of appeal
(1) An award of 3% did not reflect the findings of fact made by the judge as to the actual cost to the Appellant of being kept out of her money.
(2) The judge failed to take any or any proper account of the expert evidence before the court as to the borrowing rates in 2008.
(3) Although the judge accepted that this was a case of private individuals rather than commercial parties he awarded a rate that was at or near the commercial rate.
(4) The judge failed to have regard to relevant matters in considering the overall fairness of the result.
(5) The judge failed to have any or sufficient regard to the fact that the Appellant obtained an order for interim payment in January 2011.
(1) The expert evidence of Mr Palette as to the limited availability and high cost of loans for unsecured borrowers in late 2008 and as to credit card interest rates.
(2) The evidence as to the actual cost of borrowing to the Appellant, and, in particular, of a £25,000 8 year loan taken out by the Appellant with Abbey National in July 2015.
(3) The evidence of investment opportunities which the Appellant contended were lost as a result of the failure to repay the loan.
(4) The use of the loan by the Respondent to repay another loan, contrary to what she had told the Appellant, and consequent overall unfairness.
The relevant principles
(1) Interest is awarded to compensate claimants for being kept out of money which ought to have been paid to them rather than as compensation for damage done or to deprive defendants of profit they may have made from the use of the money.
(2) This is a question to be approached broadly. The court will consider the position of persons with the claimants' general attributes, but will not have regard to claimants' particular attributes or any special position in which they may have been.
(3) In relation to commercial claimants the general presumption will be that they would have borrowed less and so the court will have regard to the rate at which persons with the general attributes of the claimant could have borrowed. This is likely to be a percentage over base rate and may be higher for small businesses than for first class borrowers.
(4) In relation to personal injury claimants the general presumption will be that the appropriate rate of interest is the investment rate.
(5) Many claimants will not fall clearly into a category of those who would have borrowed or those who would have put money on deposit and a fair rate for them may often fall somewhere between those two rates.
The exercise of the judge's discretion
(1) The actual cost of borrowing - the court is concerned with the general attributes of a claimant, not what the particular claimant actually did or otherwise would have done or, in this case, the claimed actual cost of borrowing.
(2) The expert evidence – this addressed the cost of long term unsecured borrowing or bridging finance at the time of the loans in 2008. This was relevant to various of the defences raised but not to the appropriate interest rate to be awarded over the period 2009 to 2016. The relevant starting point for those purposes is the Bank of England base rate over that period.
(3) The commercial rate - although borrowing rates for individuals may be higher than for businesses, that is one of the reasons why, having regard to general attributes, it is often unrealistic to approach the issue on the basis that the money would all have been replaced by money borrowed. A blended rate may well result in rates comparable to the commercial rate, given the much lower deposit rate.
(4) Overall fairness – interest is awarded to compensate the claimant for being kept out of money rather than for damage done, such as alleged lost investment opportunities, or to punish or to call the defendant to account for his use of the money. The merits of the underlying case are not relevant to the award of interest, but delay in the prosecution of that case may well be.
(5) The order for interim payment – this does not attract interest at the judgment rate and that rate is accordingly not relevant to the order made. The fact that it does not do so made it all the more important for the Appellant to pursue the proceedings with expedition, which she did not do.
Conclusion
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN: