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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 >> LSC Finance Ltd v Abensons Law Ltd [2015] EWHC 1163 (Ch) (11 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/1163.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1163 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
1 Bridge Street West Manchester M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
LSC FINANCE LIMITED | Claimant | |
and | ||
ABENSONS LAW LIMITED | ||
(trading as ABENSONS SOLICITORS) | Defendant |
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165 Fleet Street, 8th Floor, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR GLEN CAMPBELL (instructed by Caytons Law) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
Wednesday 11 March 2015
JUDGE HODGE QC:
""On 2 July 2013, Mr Boddice attended the defendant''s offices in order to drop off the executed transfer form required by LSC in order to put the Property back into the joint names of Mr & Mrs Boddice. This transfer form had to be signed by Mrs Boddice and he told me that she had done so. I wanted to check her signature on the transfer form so I requested Mr Boddice call Mrs Boddice so that I could speak to her. She confirmed it was her signature and that she had ‘'signed it in a hurry’'. I considered that explanation dealt with my query.""
""Mr and Mrs [Boddice] called in. Checked their ID against passports. They signed some documentation.""
""[LSC] had agreed to lend money to both Mr and Mrs Boddice but clearly Mr Boddice can no longer be a party to the loan when he does not own the property which the loan is to be secured against.
Please confirm why such transfer has been made and why such information has not been disclosed. Please also confirm whether the transfer was for value or not. I will require such information from you before I am able to take further instructions from my client.""
""They totally forgot about this until the Land Registry papers came through. They are going to put the title back into joint names so can you let me know what you want to do. Ideally I would like to complete with an undertaking to re-register Richard on the title but will be led by you.
Abensons have been pretty dire on this deal and the Boddices are anxious to complete. If you can let me know what you need I will do my utmost to get it to you so that we can complete either tomorrow or Monday.""
""I believe that your client wishes to complete this matter today and so my client is putting me in funds. I will obviously require the amended undertakings before we can complete. I will also require your bank details.
I look forward to hearing from you once you are in a position to complete.""
""We note we need to transfer the property into joint names after we have registered your charge at HM Land Registry.""
""Conveyancing transactions are no doubt generally commercial transactions of one sort or another, but they are not generally regarded as being within the field of mercantile law. Traditionally the practice of conveyancers of unregistered land shows (especially in relation to mortgages protected by a deposit of title deeds) a lively awareness of the possibility of fraud. The risk of a husband forging his wife''s signature on a mortgage of their jointly-owned property is one which [...] was known long before the flood of more complex mortgage frauds came to light in 1991 and 1992.
[Counsel] pointed out that under TMC’'s standardised documentation, the same undertakings were to be given for a mortgage on initial purchase as well as for a remortgage, and that on an initial purchase the essential documents would include a transfer or conveyance executed by the vendors (of whom the purchasers’' solicitors and the lender''s solicitors, if different, might know nothing). However in such a case the solicitors who knew nothing of the vendors could seek an identical undertaking (in respect of the transfer or conveyance) from the vendors’' solicitors; and if the undertaking was refused, they would be on inquiry. Moreover, even in the absence of an express undertaking the vendors’' solicitors would normally be liable on an implied warranty of authority if, on completion, they handed over a transfer or conveyance with a forged signature. The finding of such a warranty depends on the facts of a particular case, but that would be a general rule…""
""... the purchaser''s solicitor can take reasonable precautions to ensure that the legal charge is properly executed by his own client. But it is difficult to see what steps he can take to ensure that the conveyance to his client is properly executed by the vendor. He must rely on the vendor''s solicitor for this purpose.""
""Unless the language used in a retainer clearly has this consequence, the courts should not be ready to impose obligations on solicitors which even the most careful solicitor may not be able to meet.”"
The breach of warranty claim could not succeed because of the failure of the bank''s submissions on the interpretation of the retainer.
""The letter was a retainer by the bank of a firm of solicitors to perform professional services of an advisory and ministerial kind for the bank. Professional services provided by the solicitors would not normally involve the guaranteeing of a result by them, such as verifying the identity of [the borrower], let alone providing the bank with what would amount to an insurance policy against the risk of fraud occurring in a transaction entered into by the bank with its customer [...] a transaction about which the solicitors were told little by the bank and in which they had no input or influence.""
""As has been repeatedly remarked, every document must be construed according to its particular terms and in its unique setting. Detailed comparisons of one document with another and of one precedent with another do not usually help the court to reach a decision on construction. Indeed, that exercise occupies a disproportionate amount of valuable time which would be better spent on the arguments that really count: those which focus on the precise terms of the relevant documents and the illuminating environment of the transaction.""
""Whilst the core nature of the warranty is well-established, its precise limits in any particular case must, in my judgment, be determined by reference to the specific circumstances which have given rise to the warranty. That is an objective question to be determined by reference to the circumstances prevailing and known to the parties at the time when the warranty is deemed to have arisen and not in the light of subsequent developments.""
""In ordinary circumstances, [solicitors] would owe no duty whatever to the opposite party in connection with any transaction in which they were instructed save through the usual mechanism of an explicit solicitor''s undertaking. The implied warranty of authority is, of course, an exception to this general proposition.""
""They strongly suggested that the court should not readily impose upon a person rendering professional services an absolute, unqualified obligation amounting, in effect, to a guarantee of his client''s identity and title.""
""… considering what the position would have been if Excel or its solicitors had asked BM solicitors to give some form of express warranty or undertaking. If they had been asked whether they warranted that they had authority to act on behalf of their client in connection with a loan agreement and the execution of the charge, it seems to me to be highly likely that they [...] might have asked why it was necessary, given the usual implication of a warranty of authority. But if they had been asked to warrant the identity of the client and to guarantee that he was the same person as the registered proprietor of 17 Richards Place, I think it is almost inconceivable that they would have agreed to do so. The likely response would simply have been that Excel must rely upon their own enquiries.""
""It may be that a solicitor owes a duty of care in tort to those dealing, through the solicitor, with his ostensible client, to take reasonable care to satisfy himself as to the identity of his client, but that, in my judgment, is conceptually different from a warranty. As Waller LJ pointed out in his judgment in Penn v. Bristol & West Building Society, ""whether a warranty of authority has been given rests on a proper analysis of the facts in any given situation…"" If the situation is that the solicitor''s client has duped him, as well as the claimant, in my judgment it is not appropriate to say that the solicitor gave any warranty of authority whatsoever.""
""… in connection with the completion of the legal charge by the Borrower in favour of LSC over the Property in connection with the loan from LSC to the Borrower.
In consideration of LSC completing the loan to the Borrower [Abensons] undertake as follows:
1. We confirm the execution of:
(a) the first legal charge by the Borrower in favour of LSC over the Property (""the Charge"").
...
(c) the Personal Guarantee by the Guarantor.
...
3. Within 7 working days of completion, we will complete the registration of the Charge against the Borrower as a first legal charge on the Property. We will send to the Land Registry the Charge and requisite registration fee with form(s) AP1, RX1 and all relevant documents (including certified copies of the Charges [sic]) to register the Charge at the Land Registry.""
""The solicitors had stepped outside their role as solicitors for their client and accepted responsibilities [to the lender].""
For those reasons I will give judgment for the claimant. I am sure that the figure can be identified.