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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 >> Mortgage Express v Sawali [2010] EWHC 3054 (Ch) (22 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/3054.html Cite as: [2011] 7 EG 98, [2010] EWHC 3054 (Ch), [2010] NPC 114, [2010] EWHC B23 (Ch), [2011] PNLR 11 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
B e f o r e :
____________________
MORTGAGE EXPRESS | Claimant | |
-and- | ||
MEHRBAN MICHAEL SINGH SAWALI | Defendant |
____________________
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
The uncontentious aspects of C's application
'…our clients will happily provide you with those parts of the files which relate to work carried out for it. The practical reality is however that your client will already have the originals or copies of most if not all of those documents. Do you want us to provide those documents?'
9.1 No order should be made in respect of Mr Hutchings's file, on the understanding that, if the file should be discovered by Defendant at some future date, he will provide such documents from it as are appropriate to Claimant.
9.2 Any order in respect of Mr David Akigbogun's file should take into account the practicalities of the position described by Mr Collins.
The Borrowers' prima facie rights to privilege and confidentiality
'…there was no implied waiver of confidentiality nor legal professional privilege by the borrower in favour of the lender, nor any implied authorisation for the solicitor to make disclosure to the lender of documents passing between the borrower and the solicitor. Any implied authorisation was merely an authorisation to pass on the information and not to divulge the communication itself'.
'Where a lender asks for a conveyancing file and you have kept a joint file for both borrower and lender clients, you cannot, without the consent of the borrower, send the whole file to the lender, unless the lender can show to your satisfaction that there is a prima facie case of fraud. If the client does not consent, you should send only those parts of the file which relate to work done for the lender'.
'I take the view that whether or not the client has any recognisable interest in continuing to assert privilege in the confidential communications, the privilege is absolute in nature and the lawyer's mouth is "shut for ever". I also agree … that it follows from this that it is the lawyer's duty to claim the privilege on behalf of the client, or former client, whose privilege it is, at any rate where it is at least arguable that the privilege exists.'
'…if you require our client to try to obtain the borrowers' informed consent, please let us have their current addresses and attempts will be made to contact them accordingly'
The "Declarations" relied on by the Claimant
'I/We declare and agree that … 17. I/We irrevocably authorise my/our conveyancer to send their entire file relating to the whole transaction (not just the loan) to you at your request'.
18.1 The effect of the Declaration is doubtful from the outset. It cannot straightforwardly amount to the actual and irrevocable authorisation which it purports to be, given that it involved no communication from the Borrower to the Defendant's predecessor. Bowstead's Law of Agency (para 3-001) suggests that an agent's authority may be actual:
…where it results from a manifestation of assent that he should represent or act for the principal expressly or impliedly made by the principal to the agent himself… [Emphasis added]
18.2 Moreover, the usual purpose of an irrevocable authority is to confer a benefit on a principal's agent, rather than on the principal or a third party. As Bowstead says at para 10-007:
Authority can be irrevocable; but this is only where the notion of agency is employed as a legal device for a different purpose from that of normal agency, to confer a security or other interest on the "agent". In such a case it is intended that the agent use the authority not for the benefit of his principal but for his own benefit, to achieve the objects of the arrangement.
18.3 The Declaration on its proper construction may not extend to privileged material, bearing in mind the following considerations:
18.3.1. The Declaration does not expressly refer to privilege.
18.3.2. The public policy in favour of protecting privilege is so strong that the courts do not readily assume that it has been overridden.
18.3.3. The Declaration may have been intended to refer to (non-privileged) documentation relating to the Borrower's purchase of the property – hence the reference to "the whole transaction (not just the loan)" – and may not have been aimed at privileged material at all.
18.3.4. The Declaration may have been intended to operate only during the course of the transaction in question, and/or for the purpose of concluding that transaction.
18.4 The Declaration may be regarded as so unusual or onerous as to require further steps to be taken to bring it to the attention of the Borrower if it was to be incorporated in a binding contract between C and the Borrower: see Interfoto Picture Library Ltd v. Stiletto Visual Programme Ltd [1989] 1 QB 433. .
18.5 The Borrowers (even if buying to let) may have been dealing as consumers with the Lender for the purposes of the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999. If so the Declaration may be "unfair" and therefore unenforceable.
18.6 In cases involving two separate transactions (a purchase funded by a different lender and a subsequent re-mortgage of the same property on the same day to the Claimant), the Borrowers' potential objections to the Claimant's demand for the purchase file (relating to a transaction which it did not even fund) would be yet stronger.
'To assist the efficient progression of a transaction and to minimise costs you agree … to authorise disclosure of information and instructions to any mortgage lender to which you have applied and which also instructs us'.
"5. TITLE
5.1 Surrounding Circumstances
5.1.1 Please report to us ... if the owner or registered proprietor has been registered for less than six months or the person selling to the borrower is not the owner or registered proprietor unless the seller is:
5.1.1.1 a personal representative of the registered proprietor; or
5.1.1.2 an institutional mortgagee exercising its power of sale; or
5.1.1.3 a receiver, trustee-in-bankruptcy or liquidator; or
5.1.1.4 developer or builder selling a property acquired under a part-exchange scheme.
5.1.2 If any matter comes to your attention, which you should reasonably expect us to consider important in deciding whether or not to lend to the borrower (such as whether the borrower has given misleading information to us or the information which you might reasonably expect to have been given to us is no longer true) and you are unable to disclose that information to us because of a conflict of interest, you must cease to act for us and return our instructions stating that you consider a conflict of interest has arisen."
"The relevant background knowledge would also, in my judgment, include the general nature of a break clause. A break clause is ... [then defined].
......
The language of the licence must also be interpreted in a way that makes commercial sense. Commercial commonsense is not merely a cross-check; it is an essential part of the process of interpretation. Commercial commonsense must also be considered from the perspective of both parties."
The Court's jurisdiction
a. the applicant was not the solicitor's client in relation to the documents which the applicant seeks;
b. the documents sought by the applicant do not belong to the applicant;
c. the applicant has no underlying substantive cause of action against the solicitor for delivery up of the file; and
d. the solicitor's client is not a party to the applicant's application.
'Under the inherent jurisdiction of the court over its officers a solicitor may be ordered upon summary application by the client, his personal representatives or his trustee in bankruptcy, by summons to deliver up to his client in proper condition all documents in the solicitor's custody or power belonging solely to the applicant'.
'The relationship of solicitor and client must have existed between the applicant, or the person whom the applicant represents, and the solicitor. Thus, delivery of papers will not be ordered where the applicant is a trustee and the employment was by a beneficiary; or where it has already been established that the relationship did not exist … or where the applicant is interested jointly with the client under the document but is not the solicitor's client'.
'…it would be a dangerous doctrine to lay down, that we can compel an attorney, because he is an attorney, to give a copy of, or produce, a document in his hands belonging to a client, except at the instance of the client himself … when an attorney holds a document for a client, it is not competent to the court, in an action by a third party against the attorney, to order him to give a copy of it…'
Conclusion
His Honour Judge Simon Brown QC
22nd November 2010.