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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 >> Cadlock v Dunn & Anor [2015] EWHC 1318 (Ch) (13 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/1318.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1318 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
IAN MALCOLM DONALD CADLOCK (The Trustee in Bankruptcy of Anthony Ivor Dunn) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) JANET ANNE DUNN (2) ANTHONY IVOR DUNN |
Respondents |
____________________
Fred Banning, Solicitor Advocate (instructed by Clarke Mairs LLP) for the First Respondent
The Second Respondent was not present at the hearing in circumstances described below.
Hearing date: 29th April 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Behrens:
1. Introduction
1. Declared that the second charge on the property be paid first from the interest in the property of the Trustee
2. Set aside the possession order and the warrant for possession but gave the Trustee permission to apply at such time as the values of the property and the legal charges are such as to entitle the Trustee to a portion of the proceeds of sale of the property.
2. The facts
On 17 July 2009 your client agreed to transfer or release to Mr Dunn his interest in the property in exchange for payment of £150,000, payment to be made in two instalments with the first payment of £100,000 to be made by 1 September 2009.
Our client's interest in the property was identical both before and after the transaction. Mr Dunn acquired an undivided half interest in the property (subject to the first charge) as a result of the transaction. Your client in his capacity as Mr Dunn's Trustee received £150,700.
£196,500 to be paid on or before 17th July 2011 and such sum will bear interest at the rate of 10% per annum from the date hereof to the date of actual payment.
The Lender has previously loaned money to the Borrower and both parties now wish to record in writing the terms of the loans previously made. The Lender agreed to provide the Borrower with a Loan under the terms of this agreement as set out in Schedule 1
3. The Judgment of DJ Morgan
The whole of the burden of the borrowing to discharge [the Trustee's] interest should be borne by the one person to receive no benefit (i.e. [Mrs Dunn]).
4. Common Ground
1. As noted above it was common ground that the effect of the 2009 transaction was that the Trustee's half share revested in Mr Dunn with the result that the property was then held by Mr and Mrs Dunn on trust for themselves as beneficial tenants in common in equal shares. It was also common ground that the purchase price for that half share was provided as a result of a joint loan to Mr and Mrs Dunn by the Lenders.
2. It was common ground that the legal charge executed by Mr and Mrs Dunn on 17th January 2011 was caught by the provisions of s 284 of the 1986 Act in that it was a disposition of property made after the presentation of the second bankruptcy petition. It was accordingly void unless ratified by the Court. There was no suggestion that such ratification should be made.
3. It was also common ground that the legal charge dated 17th January 2011 was effective to create an equitable charge of Mrs Dunn's beneficial half share of the property in favour of the Lenders in respect of the whole of the outstanding debt. I was referred in particular to the decision of Judge Pelling QC in Bateman v Hyde [2009] BPIR 737 who in paragraph 13 had referred to Thames Guarantee v Campbell [1985] 1 QB 210. I respectfully agree with the views of Judge Pelling QC on this point.
5. The equity of exoneration
19. I was referred to a number of passages in Halsbury's Laws of England, 5th Ed., where the equity of exoneration is discussed. The subject is discussed, in particular, at vol. 5 (Bankruptcy and Personal Insolvency), para. 674, vol. 49 (Financial Services and Institutions), para. 1152 and vol. 72 (Matrimonial and Civil Partnership Law), paras. 239 - 242. The matter is described in essentially the same way in each place although the language differs somewhat. In volume 49 at para. 1152, the matter is described in this way:
"Mortgages and charges
A person who mortgages his property to secure the debt of another stands in the relation of guarantor towards the person whose debt is thus secured, and is entitled to be exonerated by the principal debtor. This principle also applies where jointly owned property is charged to secure the indebtedness of one co-owner."
20. The law is described in a similar way in Fisher and Lightwood's Law of Mortgage, 13th ed., at paras. 45.7:
"Mortgage for another's debt
A person who has mortgaged his property to secure the debt of another is presumed in the absence of other evidence to be only a surety and is entitled to be exonerated by the principal debtor. The same is true where jointly-owned property is mortgaged to secure money raised for the benefit of one joint owner."
21. The law was considered and applied by Scott J (as he then was) in re Pittortou [1985] 1 All ER 285 where a property jointly owned by husband and wife was charged to secure repayment of the husband's overdraft at the bank. Scott J said at 288 c-f:
"It is, I think, clear that the effect of the equity of exoneration in a case such as this is indeed to enhance the proprietary interest of the surety/joint mortgagor and not simply to give the surety a personal right to an indemnity from the debtor who is the other joint mortgagor. Re Cronmire, ex p Cronmire [1901] 1 KB 480 establishes the entitlement of a wife, whose property has been charged to secure her husband's debts, to prove in his bankruptcy in respect of the indemnity which he owes her. A subsequent case, Re a debtor (No 24 of 1971), ex p Marley (J) v Trustee of the property of the debtor [1976] 2 All ER 1010, [1976] 1 WLR 952, establishes that in addition to the right to claim an indemnity the surety can claim an enhanced proprietary interest. In that case Foster J, with whose judgment Fox J agreed, said ([1976] 2 All ER 1010 at 1013, [1976] 1 WLR 952 at 955):
'As between the bankrupt's father and the bankrupt, and bearing in mind that the father is admittedly only a surety, it should be implied that their intention was that the bankrupt's beneficial interest should bear the burden. If that is so, it seems to me that the bankrupt's interest vested in his trustee in bankruptcy, subject to an inchoate right of indemnity, if the surety were called on to pay, or the debt fell to be discharged, as it would have to be, out of the proceeds of sale of the property. Alternatively, I think that the father could be regarded as having an actual charge on the bankrupt's interest within the principle discussed by Warrington J in Gee v Liddell [1913] 2 Ch 62 at 72 … '
However, the equity of exoneration is a principle of equity which depends on the presumed intention of the parties. If the circumstances of a particular case do not justify the inference, or indeed if the circumstances negate the inference, that it was the joint intention of the joint mortgagors that the burden of the secured indebtedness should fall primarily on the share of that of them who was the debtor, then that consequence will not follow. In Paget v Paget [1898] 1 Ch 470, [1895–9] All ER Rep 1150 the Court of Appeal so found in a case where the indebtedness had been incurred in order to finance the luxurious living of the family, and had been taken advantage of and had been to the benefit of both joint mortgagors, notwithstanding that it was in law the debt of only one of them. And Walton J in Re Woodstock (a bankrupt) (19 November 1979, unreported) drew attention in his judgment to the need for the courts, in considering how the equity of exoneration should work as between a husband and a wife, to take into account the relationship which husbands and wives bear, or ought to bear, to one another in their family affairs in current times. The guide that Victorian cases can provide to the inferences which should be drawn from the dealings with one another of husbands and wives today is often not very valuable. Walton J, commenting on Hall v Hall [1911] 1 Ch 487, said:
'I do not think I have to go into the interesting question whether that case is now good law in view of completely changed social conditions. It appears to me that that case was decided in the days when the wife did nothing except sit at home and run the household and boss the servants about, and the husband was expected to be, and indeed was, the provider. Times have now changed, and I am very far from that if that case were to be heard on precisely the same facts tomorrow, the decision would necessarily be the same.' "
22. The later discussion in Re Pittortou concerned the question as to what the result should be in relation to sums drawn by the husband from the bank and spent on household expenses and sums drawn and spent on the husband's business or on other matters for the benefit of the husband. It was held that the wife was entitled to an equity of exoneration in relation to sums spent on the husband's business and the other matters but not in relation to sums spent in relation to household expenses.
23. As Re Pittortou makes clear, the joint owner who is effectively in the position of a surety for the other joint owner is not only entitled to be indemnified by the other joint owner in relation to the relevant debt but the right to an indemnity carries with it a proprietary right over the indemnifying party's share in the property. Thus, the party with the benefit of an equity of exoneration has not only a personal claim but is also a secured creditor in relation to that claim. This is significant as regards that person's other creditors. It is pointed out in footnote 6 to Halsbury's Laws, 5th ed., vol. 49, para. 1152 that there were dicta in some of the early cases on this subject suggesting that the right of exoneration should be postponed to the rights of other creditors but there is no support for this approach in later cases.
36. Re Chawda is a complicated decision on its facts and I do not think that much would be gained from analysing them in any great detail. Registrar Baister deals with the law in paragraphs 39 – 41 of his judgment which sets out a somewhat longer passage from Scott J's judgment than that cited by Morgan J in Day. In paragraph 42 he set out the submissions of Counsel for the Trustee which were said to be derived from Re Pittortou:
(a) the wife must have joined in a charge over jointly owned property;
(b) she must have done so for the purposes of the husband;
(c) the money must have been borrowed and applied for the benefit of the husband alone.
The transactions which I have outlined above have to been seen in the context of the Chawdas functioning as a family unit as many, perhaps even most, modern families do. (I note here the relevance of changing social conditions mentioned by Walton J in the passage from Hall vHall [1911] 1 Ch 487 cited by Scott J in Re Pittortou.) Mrs Chawda herself confirmed in general terms that she and her husband operated as a single unit.
It seems to me that in circumstances in which a husband and wife operate as the Chawdas have, pooling their earnings and profits, administering their financial affairs jointly and enjoying together a prosperous life, if not an extravagant one such as that of the Pagets, it is as unattractive as it is artificial for one of them to take the benefits while at the same time seeking to enforce an individual right in one respect only to the disadvantage of the other spouse (or in this case his creditors).
Discussion
A person who mortgages his property to secure the debt of another stands in the relation of guarantor towards the person whose debt is thus secured, and is entitled to be exonerated by the principal debtor. This principle also applies where jointly owned property is charged to secure the indebtedness of one co-owner.