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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 >> Halifax Plc & Anor v Curry Popeck (A Firm) & Anor [2008] EWHC 1692 (Ch) (18 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/1692.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1692 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) HALIFAX PLC | ||
(2) BANK OF SCOTLAND | Claimants | |
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(1) CURRY POPECK (A Firm) | ||
(2) PULVERS (A Firm) | Defendants |
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Suite 91 Temple Chambers,
3 - 7 Temple Avenue, London EC4Y OHP
Telephone 020 7404 7464
MR S AYLIFFE QC appeared on behalf of the First Defendant
MR P JONES QC appeared on behalf of the Second Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
Wednesday 18 June 2008
MR JUSTICE NORRIS:
(a) The Halifax did not on the facts become subrogated to the C&G charge because the evidence does not establish that the Halifax advance of £280,000 was applied in repayment of the C&G advance, which then totalled £293,000.(b) The Halifax did not acquire an immediate and direct equitable charge over the bungalow, despite what it thought it was getting, because there is no contract which satisfies section 2 of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 signed by John and Tracy promising to grant such a charge.
(c) The Halifax may have acquired an equitable charge over Tracy's beneficial interest in the proceeds of sale of the bungalow and (subject to the question of John's bankruptcy) might likewise have done so over John's share. Arguments on this position have been reserved and I was only to be called upon to consider the charges which might affect the legal estate in the bungalow, not those which might affect beneficial interests.
(d) Subject to the effects of John's bankruptcy, it was agreed that a proprietary estoppel arose in favour of the Halifax, which had been led to believe that it would acquire a legal charge over the bungalow and on the faith of that belief advanced £280,000. It is implicit in this agreement that the estate in the bungalow vested in the registered proprietors, Tracy and John, is subject to the proprietary estoppel; and hence that the fraud practised on the Halifax was a joint enterprise of Tracy and John. In fact, Morgan J so found: see paragraph 375 of his judgment.
"BOS have obtained a charging order over the bungalow which on any view ranks behind the Verso charge. If that charging order were to take priority over our client's equitable charge, then your client's liability to Bank of Scotland would be reduced by the amount of the equity in the property that would be utilised to satisfy the BOS charging order. However, if our client's interest takes priority over the charging over, your client will end up paying for the loss which is not mitigated by the value of the bungalow."
"Except as provided by sections 29 and 30, the priority of an interest affecting a registered estate or charge is not affected by a disposition of the estate or charge."
"The effect of the basic priority rule in section 28 is that the priority of competing equitable interests affecting a registered estate or charge is determined by the order in which they were created. A later disposition which creates a subsequent equitable interest will not affect the priority of a prior equitable interest which affected the registered estate or charge. Under the general law, competing equitable interests in property generally ranked in the order in which they were created provided that the equities were equal. The conduct of the holder of the prior equitable interest might disentitle him from asserting priority over the later equitable interest."
The effect of section 28 is to maintain the rule under the general law that the priority of competing equitable interests was determined by the order in which they were created. However, it removes the qualification that priorities might be changed if the holder of the prior equity was at fault.
"If a registrable disposition of a registered estate is made for valuable consideration, completion of the disposition by registration has the effect of postponing to the interest under the disposition any interest affecting the estate immediately before the disposition whose priority is not protected at the time of registration."
I briefly note that the section operates by reference to the registration, not by reference to the completion, of the transaction. However, this point was of no materiality on the facts before me.
"We understand there is some urgency with this matter and that your clients are in a position to exchange and complete simultaneously, almost immediately. Assuming this to be the case, and that there are no other outstanding queries, we look forward to hearing from you with a view to completing this matter within the next seven days."
The reference to "your clients" is somewhat obscure, but seems to me to be a reference to Mr Sinclair, since the rest of the letter contemplates that Cosec itself will be acting on behalf of John Wale and Tracy Whale.
"We confirm the mortgage outstanding was £200,000."
This cannot be right on anybody's version of events. The £200,000 does not represent the balance outstanding on any of the mortgages taken out in respect of the bungalow. A likely explanation is that the figure of £200,000 was fixed upon by reference to the chargeable bands for Stamp Duty which, up to £250,000, would have been 1% at that time.
"I return the enclosed transfer to be completed by the insertion of the relevant consideration where marked in pencil in box 9 of the transfer. Such insertions must be initialled by the transferee or his representative."
It is likely to have been at this point that the consideration of £200,000 was inserted on the transfer. Once that had been done, the transfer (as so amended) was returned by Pulvers on 1 June 2004 together with the requisite fee.
"It would be stretching the concept of consideration to breaking point to characterise the repayment of the C&G mortgage even if it took place at around the same time as the transfer to John and involved the provision by John of a benefit to Tracy as "consideration" for the transfer to John. Whatever else may be the case, one thing is absolutely clear, namely that there was no genuine sale between John and Tracy as vendors and John as purchaser. Indeed, there is no evidence of any underlying deal between John and Tracy by which John agreed to give anything to Tracy in return for the transfer of the property to him. All that happened was that they carried out a re-shuffling of the legal title to the property in furtherance of their fraudulent enterprises."
In my judgment that is an accurate summary of the factual situation and it accords with the finding of Morgan J recited in paragraph 11 above. The burden lies, in my judgment, upon the Bank of Scotland to show that there was a transfer to John for valuable consideration. I do not consider that on the evidence they have discharged that burden because none of the conveyancing documents can be trusted and there is an equally, if not more, compelling analysis, namely that this is simply the execution of a fraudulent enterprise in the context of which the concept of "consideration" is meaningless. I would accordingly decide this case on the footing that the general rule set out in section 28 applies because Bank of Scotland cannot bring itself within the provisions of section 29.
"A disposition of the registered land or of a legal estate therein for valuable consideration shall, when registered, confer on the transferee or grantee an estate in fee simple subject --(a) to the incumbrances and other entries (if any) appearing on the register, and(b) to the overriding interests (if any) affecting the estate transferred or created,
but free from all other estates and interests whatsoever."
Mr Jones QC submits that, although the language of section 29 is different, its effect is entirely the same, namely that the section was not intended to keep alive equitable estates or interests which were unprotected at the date of the registration of a disposition. He readily acknowledged that in any system of registration such a rule was capable of manipulation and of conferring benefits on the unworthy. But he said that that should not mean that the plain words of the section should be accorded a contorted construction. In support of this he referred me to the well-known decision in Midland Bank v Green. [1981] AC 513 concerning unregistered land. Very shortly put, a father granted his son a ten year option to purchase the farm. The option was not registered as an estate contract. Six years later the father, wishing to deprive the son of his option, conveyed the farm, which had a market value of £400,000, to the son's mother for £500. In the House of Lords the case was said to be a plain one. The estate contract was not registered before the completion of the purchase by the mother. It was therefore void against her. That was the appearance and, said Lord Wilberforce, it was also the reality. He said:
"The case is plain; the Act is clear and definite. Intended as it was to provide a simple and understandable system for the protection of title to land, it should not be read down or glossed. To do so would be to destroy the usefulness of the Act. Any temptation to re-mould the Act to meet the facts of the present case on the supposition that it is a hard one and that justice requires it is, for me at least, removed by the consideration that the Act provides a simple and effective protection for persons in the son's position, namely by registration."
"In each of these cases a purchaser may acquire the registered land free from the rights of the third party, yet find himself personally liable for the loss suffered by that third party or subject to some personal equity which enables the transaction to be set aside. This accords with the principle applicable under Torrens systems that indefeasibility of title in no way denies the right of the plaintiff to bring against a registered proprietor a claim in personam founded in law or in equity for such relief as a court acting in personam may grant."
Mr Jones QC submitted that that rule applied even if John himself had participated in the creation of the equity which the transfer to him for valuable consideration wiped clean.
"For that reason it will not take effect as a right created by the transferee between transfer and registration because it predates the transfer. It will not therefore be binding on the transferee when he or she is registered as proprietor unless the seller protects the lien by the entry of a notice against his or her own title prior to the registration of the transfer. We gave this issue considerable thought. In the end, however, we have concluded that it is unnecessary to create any special regime to ensure that a buyer does not take free of an unpaid vendor's lien when the transfer to him or her is registered. Unpaid vendor's liens that are intended to survive completion are uncommon. It should be enough if practitioners are alerted to the need to enter a notice in respect of them prior to or simultaneously with the registration of the transfer."