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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 >> CC Automotive Group Ltd, Re [2019] EWHC 2771 (Ch) (06 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2771.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2771 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN LEEDS
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF CC AUTOMOTIVE GROUP LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Leeds Combined Court Centre, The Courthouse, 1 Oxford Row, Leeds, LS1 3BG. |
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B e f o r e :
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DANIEL ROBERT WHITELEY SMITH (as the liquidator of CC Automotive Group Limited) |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) RETAIL MONEY MARKET LIMITED (on its own behalf and as the representative of those companies which are listed as Third Party Funders in the Schedule to the Application Notice and which fall within paragraph 2 of the court's order made on 6 August 2019) (2) WALKER MORRIS TRUSTEES LIMITED (as the representative of those who fall within the definition of "Customer" in clause 1.1 of the Declaration of Trust made by CC Automotive Group Limited on 23 February 2015) |
Respondents |
____________________
Benjamin Wood (instructed by Harrison Clark Rickerbys Solicitors Limited) for the First Respondent
Hugo Groves (instructed by Walker Morris LLP) for the Second Respondent
Hearing dates: 18-19 September 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Klein:
"Given the financial position of the Group and based on legal advice received by the directors of [Carcraft's] ultimate parent company, Carcraft Group Limited, Carcraft has agreed to constitute the Trust (as defined in clause 1 below) and hold the Trust Monies (as defined in clause 1 below) upon trust for the purposes set out in this deed."
"…"Customer" means any person who purchases a DHP…during the Relevant Period, such persons to be identified in the Customer Trust Account Schedule.
"Customer Proportion" means, in respect of each DHP sold to a Customer during the Relevant Period, the amount listed opposite each Customer's name in the Customer Trust Account Schedule less [certain deductions which are not relevant for present purposes].
"Customer Trust Account Schedule" means the schedule to be prepared and maintained on behalf of [Carcraft] identifying all Customers and DHPs and in the form set out in Schedule to this deed.
"DHPs" means [long-term DHPs] sold during the Relevant Period, for which those customers pay in advance.
"DHP Services" means the services which [Carcraft] contracts to provide pursuant to the DHPs…
"Failure Event" means failure by Carcraft to perform certain or all of the DHP Services in breach of the terms of a DHP purchased by a Customer.
"Failure Value" means the monetary value…of the substituted services that the Customer must purchase from a third party as a result of the Failure Event.
"Insolvency Event" means:…
(d) an administrator is appointed to [Carcraft]…
"Relevant Period" means the period from but excluding the date of this deed until the occurrence of…an Insolvency Event…
"Solvency Statement" means a statement by [Carcraft] that (i) [it] has net assets and (ii) [it] will be able to pay all of its debts as they fall due during the 12 months starting on and including the date of the statement…
"Trust Bank Account" means the account in the name of the Company held at the Bank with sort code 01-10-01 and account number 68189192.
"Trust Monies" means the monies standing to the credit of the Trust Bank Account at the relevant time…"
"In the event that [Carcraft] makes…a Solvency Statement prior to an Insolvency Event: then…the purposes of the Trust shall be deemed to be discharged…the express Trust provided for in this deed shall be extinguished…and there shall be a resulting trust of the Trust Monies in favour of [Carcraft] which shall apply such Trust Monies as it shall see fit, in its absolute discretion."
"If an Insolvency Event occurs and [Carcraft] does not make a Discharge Statement within 90 days of such Insolvency Event, all of the Trust Monies shall then be paid to the Customers in the Customer Proportions."
"If a Failure Event occurs in respect of a DHP prior to an Insolvency Event, a proportion of the Trust Monies equal to the lesser of:…the Failure Value of that Failure Event…and the Customer Proportion in respect of that DHP on the date of the Failure Event shall be paid to the relevant Customer, provided always that any payment shall in any event be limited to the cost of the DHP paid by the Customer to [Carcraft]."
"In mid-May 2015 RateSetter, along with a number of the third party funders, established a working group to consider the issues that may arise as result of [Carcraft's] administration and the impact this may have on the affected customers…
As a result of the discussions which took place in the working group, a number of the third party funders decided to engage an alternative warranty provider to replace the DHP. This was in order to ensure that all the affected customers could continue with equivalent cover despite [Carcraft's] insolvency.
Accordingly, a number of the third party funders, following a tender process, entered into a contract with Motorway Direct plc to cover the DHPs of the affected customers financed by that third party funder…
On the entry into the agreement, RateSetter sent letters to all of its affected customers to confirm that, in the light of [Carcraft's] insolvency, alternative and equivalent cover had been put in place…to replace the DHP cover…
During the period from when [Carcraft] entered into administration…and the date the agreement became effective (24 August 2015), RateSetter paid its affected customers directly for any costs incurred in paying for replacement services that would have been available under the DHP but had not been provided under the DHP as result of [Carcraft's] insolvency…"
"[RateSetter] was not aware of the existence of the [Declaration of Trust]…or the trust at the time it was organising paying for the [alternative policies]. I am instructed by Mr Purdy that, by the time RateSetter entered into the agreement with a third party warranty provider, it was aware in general terms that, in the 2-3 months prior to its administration, [Carcraft] have been putting some money aside (into a separate bank account) in connection with the DHP. [RateSetter] was not aware either of the arrangements (nor specifically that a trust had been created) or of the sums involved. It was only following conversations with [the liquidator] (after the agreement with the third party warranty provider was agreed in June 2015 and concluded in August 2015) that [RateSetter] became aware of the sums in question and the nature of the trust arrangements."
"Although RateSetter was aware in general terms of the existence of a separate bank account, neither [a letter from Eversheds (which had advised Carcraft at the time the Declaration of Trust was made) to the liquidator's solicitor], nor its contents, were known to RateSetter at the time (nor certainly up to the point of arranging [alternative policies] for our customers). In particular, RateSetter had no idea which (if any) of its customers were covered by the trust or the extent (if any) to which those customers stood to benefit.
RateSetter's primary objective in paying the ad hoc expenses and arranging the [alternative policies] was to ensure so far as possible that its customers were not out of pocket or left high and dry as a result of Carcraft's insolvency.
Although it is difficult to speculate on events that did not actually happen, I believe that, if RateSetter had known that some or all of our customers had access to funds in a trust (and particularly a trust that would – in the words of Eversheds – "significantly reduce" or "extinguish" their exposure), we would have approached things differently. However, RateSetter mistakenly believed that, without RateSetter stepping in to assist its customers, those customers would have been left high and dry.
In terms of how things might have been approached differently, I believe that I would have proposed/accepted one of two alternatives for dealing with those customers who had interests in the Trust.
It might have been the case that RateSetter would have told those customers to make a claim directly on the Trust and then – to the extent that there was any shortfall – RateSetter would have offered to make up that difference.
However, if there was the prospect of this being administratively difficult or subject to delays or substantial inconvenience for RateSetter's customers, then I believe that RateSetter would instead have agreed to make those customers whole (by the provision of the [alternative policies] and the payment of ad hoc expenses), as in fact happened, but in exchange for an assignment of the customers' rights against Carcraft, including in respect of the Trust. In that way, the customers could continue to receive an equivalent to the DHP service, unaffected by and not having to deal with the consequences and risks of Carcraft's insolvency, which would have been for RateSetter to handle and take forward.
Given what has actually happened in terms of the delays in sorting out the Trust account and reconciling the information, and assuming that we had been told by the liquidator that a full distribution of the Trust was not imminent, I am confident that RateSetter would have adopted the second of the two courses described above (i.e. agree to set the [alternative policies] up for the customers in exchange for an assignment). I do not believe that we would have offered the customers a choice.
To be clear, I do not believe that RateSetter would had paid the sums that it did, without requiring anything from the customers, if it had known or expected that the customers would receive a distribution from the Trust as is now contended for on behalf of the customers."
"To the extent that the lenders organised and financed alternative warranties for their customers, they did so in the belief that the customers' rights arising out of and in connection with the DHPs were worthless, in view of [Carcraft's] insolvency…[That belief was] mistaken, because of the benefits and rights accruing to the customers under the [Declaration of Trust]. The mistaken [belief has] caused the lenders to confer a benefit on the customers and/or for the customers to be enriched the extent of the benefits and rights accruing to them under the [Declaration of Trust] (alternatively the extent and value of the benefits conferred by the lenders…)"
Section 5 of the Mercantile Law Amendment Act 1856
"Whereas inconvenience is felt by persons engaged in trade by reason of the laws of England and Ireland being in some particulars different from those of Scotland in matters of common occurrence in the course of such trade, and with a view to remedy such inconvenience is it expedient to amend the laws of England and Ireland as hereinafter is mentioned"
"Every person who, being surety for the debt or duty of another, or being liable with another for any debt or duty, shall pay such debt or perform such duty, shall be entitled to have assigned to him, or to a trustee for him, every judgment, specialty, or other security which shall be held by the creditor in respect of such debt or duty, whether such judgment, specialty, or other security shall or shall not be deemed at law to have been satisfied by the payment of the debt or performance of the duty, and such person shall be entitled to stand in the place of the creditor, and to use all the remedies, and, if need be, and upon a proper indemnity, to use the name of the creditor, in any action or other proceeding, at law or in equity, in order to obtain from the principal debtor, or any co-surety, co-contractor, or co-debtor, as the case may be, indemnification for the advances made and loss sustained by the person who shall have so paid such debt or performed such duty, and such payment or performance so made by such surety shall not be pleadable in bar of any such action or other proceeding by him:
Provided always, that no co-surety, co-contractor, or co-debtor shall be entitled to recover from any other co-surety, co-contractor, or co-debtor, by the means aforesaid, more than the just proportion to which, as between those parties themselves, such last-mentioned person shall be justly liable."
i) The effect of Section 5 is wider than the mischief which the Preamble to the Act suggests was intended to be nullified by the Act;
ii) Section 5 provides two cumulative rights to a co-obligor who performs the co-obligors' duty;
iii) The first right is the right to have assigned to it "every judgment, specialty, or other security which shall be held by the creditor in respect of such…duty" ("the first Section 5 right");
iv) Because of section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, the third party funders have been liable, with Carcraft, for performance of the long-term DHPs;
v) By the provision of equivalent alternative policies, alternative policy funders have performed (which Mr Groves accepted, so long as the alternative policies are in fact equivalent to the equivalent DHPs);
vi) Customers' beneficial interests in the trust fund are in the nature of security interests;[4]
vii) So that, under the first Section 5 right, so far as they relate to those customers who have been provided with alternative policies, those beneficial interests (or the rights those customers enjoy by the Declaration of Trust) have been assigned to those customers' alternative policy funders;[5]
viii) The second right is the right to use all the creditor's remedies in order to obtain, from the other co-obligor "indemnification for…loss sustained by the [co-obligor] who shall have…performed [the co-obligors'] duty" ("the second Section 5 right");
ix) The second Section 5 right is in wide terms and is not limited to a right to sue the other co-obligor in respect of the duty which has in fact been discharged;
x) The second Section 5 right gives alternative policy funders the right to all causes of action their customers have against Carcraft in all its capacities;
xi) The second Section 5 right therefore entitles alternative policy funders to call for the liquidator to pay over to them their customers' shares of the trust fund, as their customers could;
xii) For the purpose of the second Section 5 right, it does not matter whether or not customers' beneficial interests in the trust fund are in the nature of security interests.
"…Personal security, or suretyship, consists of the contract of guarantee, whereby the guarantor promises to answer for the obligation of the debtor should the debtor default. The effect is to give the creditor a secondary contractual action against the guarantor in the event of default by the principal debtor…By contrast, real security gives the creditor rights over real or personal property appropriated to meet the debt or other obligation…
Real security may be created by contract or may arise by operation of law at common law, in equity or under certain statutes. When created by contract the security takes the form of mortgage, pledge or charge; when created by operation of law the security is called a lien.
Real securities fall into three classes:
(a) mortgages: these are real securities by which the creditor obtains proprietary rights over the subject matter of the security. Such securities do not depend for their validity on the creditor obtaining possession of the property at its grant. The creditor's proprietary rights give him various enforcement powers which he can, at common law, exercise outside the court, as of right because they arise from the nature of the security;
(b) pledge and possessory lien: there are real securities by which the creditor does not obtain proprietary rights over the property. The validity of such a security depends on the creditor obtaining possession of the property. It is from that possession that the security comes; and
(c) charges and non-possessory liens: these real securities do not depend for validity on the creditor obtaining either proprietary rights over or the possession of the property. The creditor simply has various enforcement rights by judicial process.
To each of the kinds of real security is incident:
(a) a right in the creditor to make the property which is subject to the security answerable for the debt or other obligation;
(b) a right in the debtor to redeem the property by paying the debt or performing the obligation; and
(c) a liability on the part of the creditor upon such payment or performance to restore the property to the owner."[7]
"…Mr. Crystal, for the administrators, submitted the following description of a security: "Security is created where a person ("the creditor") to whom an obligation is owed by another ("the debtor") by statute or contract, in addition to the personal promise of the debtor to discharge the obligation, obtains rights exercisable against some property in which the debtor has an interest in order to enforce the discharge of the debtor's obligation to the creditor."
Whilst not holding that that is a comprehensive definition of "security", in my judgment it is certainly no wider than the ordinary meaning of the word…"
"…Is the right of distress for rent in arrear, a security held by a creditor in respect of a debt, within the meaning of this section? We think that it is not. In the first place, the right of distress is not in common parlance, nor we think, in legal phraseology, a security held for a debt, it is a particular remedy which arises on non-payment; in the second place, the section appears to be dealing with securities, which, according to the existing law, are in their nature assignable, which is not the case with the power of distress for rent in arrear, which, according to the Common Law, was only incidental to the immediate reversion; and, lastly, we think that the preamble is strong to shew that the Legislature had no intention of effecting a great change in the law regulating the relations of landlord and tenant, for it recites, "Whereas inconvenience is felt by persons engaged in trade by reason of the laws of England and Ireland being in some particulars different from those of Scotland in matters of common occurrence in the course of such trade, and, with a view to remedy such inconvenience it is expedient to amend the laws of England and Ireland as hereinafter is mentioned."
But if the right of distress is not a security within the meaning of the section, is it one of the remedies all of which the person paying the debt is entitled to use? The precise construction of the clause and the precise meaning of the phrase "all the remedies" is not easy to ascertain, but we think that the remedies are confined to proceedings at Law or in Equity in which, but for the statute, the payment might have been pleadable, and it is evident that payment could not have been pleaded to a distress."
"…The only difficulty I have felt, is, that the words "co-contractor" and "co-debtor" are not repeated in that part of the clause which provides that the payment shall not be pleadable in bar of any action or other proceeding by the party making it. But it must be remembered that one who is liable jointly with others stands in the position of surety for their proportions of the debt, and, if he pays the whole, is entitled to call upon them for contribution. In all rational systems of law, where a surety pays the debt, he is entitled to the benefit of all securities which the creditor held. Such is the law of France where law and equity are blended. Such also is the law of Scotland. The preamble to the Mercantile Law Amendment Act recites the inconvenience of the law of England being in some particulars different from that of Scotland: and I apprehend that the enactment now under consideration was made with the intention of assimilating the law of this country with the Scotch law in this particular. In England, prior to the passing of this act, a surety or co-debtor who had been compelled to pay the debt for which he was liable, could not obtain the benefit of any securities held by the creditor without having recourse to a court of equity; and not always then. The section in question, I think, meant to afford the party at least the same remedy at law as he would have had in equity. This it does in two modes, first, by enacting that he shall be entitled to have the securities assigned to him, secondly, by taking away the technical difficulty that before existed to his making the security available, viz. that the remedy was taken away by payment. As to the first, it is clear that the provision applies not only to persons who stand in the position of sureties, but also to joint-debtors. Whether they stand in the relation of principal and surety or not, is immaterial, provided there is a joint liability. And, as to the non-insertion of the words "co-contractor" and "co-debtor," in the latter part of the clause, it seems to me that that objection has been sufficiently answered. I think a "co-debtor," who pays the entire debt, is a surety in the sense in which that word is used here. Further, I agree with my Brother Williams, that whether a co-debtor is comprehended within the latter part of the section or not, he clearly is comprehended within the former, and that that alone entitles him to the assignment here sought to be enforced. And, lastly, seeing the manifest object and intention of the statute, if there be any difficulty in its construction, it ought to be construed, like all remedial statutes, so as best to advance the remedy and to suppress the mischief…"
"Prior to the enactment of the Mercantile Law Amendment Act 1856, the common law position was that a surety was only entitled to be subrogated to the securities held by the creditor which had not been satisfied or extinguished by the payment. Thus payment by the surety who was jointly liable with the principal discharged the debt, and the surety had only his right of indemnity against the principal. That rule was abrogated by s.5 of that enactment, which provided that the surety who has paid the debt or performs the duty in full is entitled to have assigned to him all judgments, specialties or securities held in respect of the debt or obligation, whether or not such were deemed at law to have been satisfied or not by the payment or performance. He is further entitled, upon giving the creditor a proper indemnity, to use the creditor's name in pursuing the principal to enforce such subrogated rights."
Equitable subrogation
"When money is paid by mistake, the claimant normally provides a benefit directly to the defendant: he pays him the money. He normally does so at his own expense: he is less wealthy by virtue of the payment. The transaction is normatively defective: the benefit is provided as the result of a mistake. In those circumstances, an obligation arises immediately under the law of unjust enrichment to reverse the enrichment by repaying the money (or an equivalent amount). The cause of action accrues when the money is mistakenly paid."
"…The decision is authority for the proposition that a third party who pays the purchase price of property may be subrogated to the vendor's lien for the purchase price, if the purchaser would otherwise have been unjustly enriched. The Menelaou parents proposed to sell the family home to release capital to be spent on (among other things) buying a house for their daughter. To enable this to happen, the claimant bank, to whom the family home was mortgaged, agreed to release its charges on condition that it would receive a charge over the house to be acquired for the daughter. This expectation was defeated because she was unaware of the arrangement and the signature on the charge was not hers. The daughter was enriched, not by the mere fact of acquiring a house, which she owed to the benevolence of her parents, but by the fact that she acquired it free of the charge which the bank expected to have and without which the transaction should not have proceeded. The main issue on the appeal was whether that enrichment occurred at the bank's expense, given that the money to pay the purchase price had come from her parents out of the proceeds of sale of the family home, and not directly from the bank. Once that question was answered in the bank's favour, it was held that the enrichment was unjust. This was because the bank's consent to the use of the proceeds of the family home to buy the daughter a house had been conditional on it obtaining a charge. That condition had failed and the daughter had consequently been enriched. To reverse the enrichment, the bank was subrogated to the vendor's lien, on the footing that the purchase price secured by that lien had in substance been paid with the bank's money. The daughter's intentions were irrelevant because the absence of a valid charge had been a windfall for her. As Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury PSC pointed out, at paragraph 70, this was because she did not pay for it. If she had been a bona fide purchaser for full value it might well have been impossible to characterise any enrichment arising from the absence of the intended charge as unjust."
"…In my view the respondent's case can be supported (contrary to the decision of the deputy judge) by a strict application of the traditional rules of subrogation, without any need to extend them beyond their established limits.
…A simple modern statement of the principle of subrogation, frequently adopted in later cases…, is that of Walton J in Burston Finance Ltd. v Speirway Ltd. [1974] 1 WLR 1648, 1652:
"where A's money is used to pay off the claim of B, who is a secured creditor, A is entitled to be regarded in equity as having had an assignment to him of B's rights as a secured creditor…It finds one of its chief uses in the situation where one person advances money on the understanding that he is to have certain security for the money he has advanced, and, for one reason or another, he does not receive the promised security. In such a case he is nevertheless to be subrogated to the rights of any other person who at the relevant time had any security over the same property and whose debts have been discharged, in whole or in part, by the money so provided by him…"
…It follows in my view that there is no difficulty in this case in finding the necessary "tracing link" between the bank and the money used to purchase the new property…The bank's interest in the purchase money was clear and direct. On this relatively narrow ground, I would hold that the appeal should be dismissed."
"The cases on the use of equitable subrogation to prevent or reverse unjust enrichment are all cases of defective transactions. They were defective in the sense that the claimant paid money on the basis of an expectation which failed. Many of them may broadly be said to arise from a mistake on the part of the claimant. For example, he may wrongly have assumed that the benefit in question was available or enforceable or that his stipulation was valid, when it was not. However, it would be unwise to draw too close an analogy with the role of mistake in other legal contexts or to try to fit the subrogation cases into any broader category of unjust enrichment. It is in many ways sui generis. In the first place, except in the case of voluntary dispositions, the law does not normally attach legal consequences to a unilateral mistake unless it is known to or was induced by the other party. But it does so in the subrogation cases. This is, as I have explained, because the windfall character of the benefit conferred on the defendant means that it is not unjust to give effect to the unilateral expectation of the claimant. Secondly, where money is paid under a contract, restitution is normally available only if the contract can be and is rescinded or is otherwise at an end without performance (e.g. by frustration). This is because the law of unjust enrichment is generally concerned to restore the parties to a normatively defective transfer to their pre-transfer position. Subrogation, however, does not restore the parties to their pre-transfer position. It effectively operates to specifically enforce a defeated expectation. Thirdly, as Lord Clarke of Stone-cum-Ebony JSC suggested in the Menelaou case, at paragraph 21, the rule may be equally capable of analysis in terms of failure of basis for the transfer. Restitution on that ground ordinarily requires that the expectation should be mutual, whereas this is not a requirement for equitable subrogation. But some cases, such as Boscawen v Bajwa [1996] 1 WLR 328 and Cheltenham & Gloucester plc v Appleyard [2004] EWCA Civ 291, cannot without artifice be analysed in any other way, since the payer does not seem to have been mistaken about anything. His expectation was simply defeated by some subsequent external event. What this suggests is that the real basis of the rule is the defeat of an expectation of benefit which was the basis of the payer's consent to the payment of the money for the relevant purpose. Mistake is not the critical element. It is only one, admittedly common, explanation of how that expectation came to be disappointed.
Two things, however, are clear. The first is that the role of the law of unjust enrichment in such cases is to characterise the resultant enrichment of the defendant as unjust, because the absence of the stipulated benefit disrupted a relevant expectation about the transaction under which the money was paid. The second is that the role of equitable subrogation is to replicate as far as possible that element of the transaction whose absence made it defective. This is why subrogation cannot be allowed to confer a greater benefit on the claimants than he has bargained for:..
Unless the claimant has been defeated in his expectation of some feature of the transaction for which he may be said to have bargained, he does not suffer an injustice recognised by law simply because in law he has no right. Failure to recognise these limitations would transform the law of equitable subrogation into a general escape route from any principle of law which the claimant overlooked or misunderstood when he arranged his affairs as he did."[13]
"My Lords, the subject of subrogation is bedevilled by problems of terminology and classification which are calculated to cause confusion. For example, it is often said that subrogation may arise either from the express or implied agreement of the parties or by operation of law in a number of different situations: see, for example, Lord Keith of Kinkel in Orakpo v. Manson Investments Ltd. [1978] AC 95, 119. As a matter of current terminology, this is true. Lord Diplock, for example, was of the view that the doctrine of subrogation in contracts of insurance operated entirely by virtue of an implied term of the contract of insurance (Hobbs v. Marlowe [1978] AC 16, 39) and although in Lord Napier and Ettrick v. Hunter [1993] AC 713 your Lordships rejected the exclusivity of this claim for the common law and assigned a larger role to equitable principles, there was no dispute that the doctrine of subrogation in insurance rests upon the common intention of the parties and gives effect to the principle of indemnity embodied in the contract…Subrogation in this sense is a contractual arrangement for the transfer of rights against third parties and is founded upon the common intention of the parties. But the term is also used to describe an equitable remedy to reverse or prevent unjust enrichment which is not based upon any agreement or common intention of the party enriched and the party deprived. The fact that contractual subrogation and subrogation to prevent unjust enrichment both involve transfers of rights or something resembling transfers of rights should not be allowed to obscure the fact that one is dealing with radically different institutions. One is part of the law of contract and the other part of the law of restitution…"
Constructive trust
"Although decided on very different facts, it is submitted that the present case bears comparison with and ought to be decided in the same way as Hughes v. Lloyd…, where HHJ Hodge QC…concluded that the element of the proceeds of a settlement of a personal injury claim, in so far as it related to the head of loss of gratuitous care provided by his late mother, was held by the claimant on trust for this state of his late mother…"
"…It is a peculiar form of constructive trust which falls outside any of the existing established categories of institutional constructive trust; but, nevertheless, its existence seems to me to be clearly established by the speech of Lord Bridge…in Hunt…and by the judgment of Kennedy LJ…in H v. S…"
"…Constructive trusts of the first kind arise where persons have accepted or assumed the role of a trustee by transactions not impeached by the claimant, independently of, and preceding, any breach of duty. Such a constructive trustee really is a trustee. He does not receive the trust property in his own right, but by a transaction which was intended to create a trust from the start. The trustee's possession of the property is coloured from the first by the trust and confidence by means of which he obtained it, and any subsequent appropriation of the property to his own use is a breach of that trust…"
"If money is paid to someone by mistake and he knows of the mistake but retains the money, it seems that he is a constructive trustee of the money for the payer. The mistake may be of fact or law. The payee will not be a trustee of the money received for so long as he is ignorant of the mistake. A constructive trust is said to arise when the conscience of the payee becomes affected, but in the case of a mistaken payment this may be when the recipient is required to act, rather than when he learns of, or suspects, that the payment was mistaken."
"…the remedial constructive trust, if introduced into English law, may provide a more satisfactory road forward. The Court by way of remedy might impose a constructive trust on a defendant who knowingly retains property of which the plaintiff has been unjustly deprived. Since the remedy can be tailored to the circumstances of the particular case, innocent third parties would not be prejudiced and restitutionary defences, such as change of position, are capable of being given effect…"
However, as the Supreme Court has confirmed, more recently, in FHR European Ventures LLP v. Cedar Capital Partners LLC [2015] AC 250 at [47], English law does not recognise a purely remedial constructive trust.
The PCL shares and the AIOF shares
"If a person transfers property to a person to hold upon trusts that are to be declared in the future, a resulting trust will arise upon the transfer and will subsist until the trusts have been effectively declared. Thus, where, as occurred in the Vandervell litigation, A procured the grant to B of an option to purchase shares with the intention that the benefit of the option should be held upon such trusts as might thereafter be declared by A or B, it was held that, pending such a declaration, there was a resulting trust of the option in favour of A…"
"If A intends to give away all his beneficial interest in a piece of property and thinks he has done so but, by some mistake or accident or failure to comply with the requirements of the law, he has failed to do so, either wholly or partially, there will, by operation of law, be a resulting trust for him of the beneficial interest of which he had failed effectually to dispose. If the beneficial interest was in A and he fails to give it away effectively to another or others or on charitable trusts it must remain in him. Early references to Equity, like Nature, abhorring a vacuum, are delightful but unnecessary. Let me give an example close to this case.
A the beneficial owner informs his trustees that he wants forthwith to get rid of his interest in the property and instructs him to hold the property forthwith upon such trusts as he will hereafter direct; that beneficial interest, notwithstanding the expressed intention and belief of A that he has thereby parted with his whole beneficial interest in the property, will inevitably remain in him for he has not given the property away effectively to or for the benefit of others..."
Disposal
Postscript
Annex
The Applicant, as liquidator of the…CC Automotive Group Limited ("the Company"), seeks directions pursuant to s.112 of the Insolvency Act 1986 in respect of the following questions arising in the winding up of the Company, namely:
a. if so, how the Monies ought to be paid and applied;
b. if not, how the Monies ought to be paid and applied, and, in particular, whether the Monies ought to be applied for the benefit of the Company's liquidation estate.
a. to the Customers in question in the proportions that they contributed thereto; or
b. in some other way, and if so, in which way.
a. to the credit card issuers in question, save to the extent that the relevant Customers have paid the credit card issuers and have not received refunds from the latter (whether as a result of the operation of s.75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 or otherwise), in which case, and to such extent, the appropriate proportion shall be paid to the Customer;
b. to the credit card issuers in question in any event;
c. to the Customers in any event; or
d. in some other way, and if so, in which way.
a. to the TPFs in question to the extent that the relevant Customers have not made payment to the TPFs in respect of the DHPs, and upon confirmation from the TPFs that they will not seek to pursue the relevant Customers, but to the Customers to the extent that the latter have made payments to the TPFs or such confirmation is not provided;
b. to the Customers in any event;
c. to the TPFs in any event; or
d. in some other way, and if so, in what way.
a. as to the proportion thereof represented by monies paid by the TPFs, to the TPFs in question to the extent that the relevant Customers have not made payment to the TPFs in respect of the DHPs, and upon confirmation from the TPFs that they will not seek to pursue the relevant Customers, but to the Customers to the extent that the latter have made payments to the TPFs or such confirmation is not provided;
b. as to the proportion represented by monies ring fenced by the Company as aforesaid, to the Applicant, as liquidator of the Company, for the benefit of the liquidation estate;
c. in the alternative to sub-paragraph (b)…above, towards making up the deficiency in respect of the Monies that ought to be held in the TBA arising from the fact that the monies standing to the credit of the TBA are less than the sums that would have stood to the credit thereof had credit not been given against monies that would otherwise have been paid into the TBA in respect of DHPs that had been cancelled prior to the terms of the Trust Deed taking effect ("the Deficiency");
d. in such other way for the benefit of the Customers, the TPFs, and/or the Company as the Court might determine; or
e. in some other way, and if so, in which way.
a. to the Applicant, as liquidator of the Company, for the benefit of the liquidation estate;
b. towards the Deficiency;
c. in such other way for the benefit of the Customers, AIOFL, and/or the Company as the Court might determine; or
d. in some other way, and if so, in which way.
a. to the Applicant, as liquidator of the Company, for the benefit of the liquidation estate;
b. towards the Deficiency;
c. in such other way for the benefit of the Customers, the TPFs, and/or the Company as the Court might determine; or
d. in some other way, and if so, in which way.
a. to the Applicant, as liquidator of the Company, for the benefit of the liquidation estate;
b. towards the Deficiency;
c. in such other way for the benefit of the Customers, the TPFs, and/or the Company as the Court might determine; or
d. in some other way, and if so, in which way.
a. all of the monies credited to the TBA in respect thereof should be paid and applied as if the monies in question represented the sale of a wholly new DHP effected after the Trust Deed took effect, or is to be treated as having taken effect, and therefore paid and applied in accordance, as appropriate, with such directions as are given pursuant to paragraphs 1 to 7 above; or
b. whether only such part of the monies credited to the TBA as represents new monies paid to the Company in respect of the replacement DPHs should be paid and applied in accordance, as appropriate, with such directions as are given pursuant to paragraphs 1 to 7 above;
c. in the event that the Court finds for the alternative provided for by sub-paragraph (b) above, whether the balance of the monies standing to the credit of the TBA in respect of the relevant transactions should be paid and applied:
i. towards the Deficiency;
ii. to the Applicant, as liquidator of the Company, for the benefit of the liquidation estate;
iii. in such other way for the benefit of the Customers, the TPFs, and/or the Company as the Court might determine;
iv. in some other way, and if so, in which way; or
d. in the alternative, whether the monies credited to the TBA in respect of the transactions in question should be paid and applied in some other way, and if so, in which way.
a. paid and applied in the same way that they would have been paid and applied had the DHPs in question been acquired on or after the date of the Trust Deed, and therefore in accordance with such directions as are given pursuant to paragraphs 1 to 8 above;
b. paid to the Applicant, as liquidator of the Company, for the benefit of the liquidation estate;
c. paid and applied for the benefit of the Customers, TPFs and/or the Company in such other way as the Court shall direct; or
d. paid and applied in some other way, and, if so, in which way.
Creation Consumer Finance |
Creditas (FGA Capital) |
First Response |
GMAC Financial Services |
Hitachi Capital |
Marsh Tier 5 |
Motonovo finance |
RateSetter |
Santander Consumer (UK) plc |
Startline Motor Finance Ltd. |
Premium Credit Ltd. |
Note 1 The numbers of customers in each class which I set out in this judgment are based on the liquidator’s analysis. In fact, the numbers I set out may be inaccurate because the liquidator has explained, in paragraph 34 of his first witness statement, that he has not counted those customers who obtained long-term DHPs in the last two weeks before Carcraft entered into administration, because Carcraft did not credit any sum to the trust account in those two weeks. No party has suggested that, in relation to this judgment, anything turns on that; although those customers may fall within the definition of “Customer” in the Declaration of Trust nevertheless. [Back] Note 2 There may be a further 11 instances, in addition to the ones I refer to in this judgment, where Carcraft credited the “wrong” amount to the trust fund; thereby compounding the practical difficulties the liquidator has faced. [Back] Note 3 Mr Cawson was instructed that all of AIOF’s relevant customers have been reimbursed but, very properly, he said that I should determine any issues in relation to AIOF’s customers on the footing that this was so, so that any comfort the liquidator gets from my decision is qualified to that extent. [Back] Note 4 Mr Wood did not take me to any authority to support this proposition. [Back] Note 5 Mr Wood also argued that, if the customers obtain judgments against Carcraft, those are also capable of being assigned to the alternative policy funders. The short answer to this point is that no customer has a judgment against Carcraft. Nor was it suggested that any customer might have such a judgment. In those circumstances, at present, this argument does not assist the alternative policy funders, because no judgment can have been assigned to them on which they can rely as against Carcraft or the liquidator. In his skeleton argument, Mr Wood also suggested that customers’ beneficial interests in the trust fund are specialties even if they do not amount to security interests, simply because the Declaration of Trust is a deed. I did not understand him to pursue this point in his oral submissions. I think he was right not to do so. Having regard to the (limited) purpose of the Act, which I consider further below, I agree with Mr Groves that the specialties contemplated by Section 5 are limited to specialty debts (that is, “obligations under seal securing a debt” (see R v. Williams [1942] AC 541, 554, per Viscount Maugham); so that, ultimately, RateSetter’s case on the first Section 5 ground can only succeed if the Declaration of Trust created security. [Back] Note 6 The only authority on the definition generally of security to which I was taken, in fact by Mr Groves, was Re Cosslett (Contractors) Ltd. [1998] Ch 495 at 508, to which I make brief further reference below. [Back] Note 7 InCosslett, Millett LJ said, at page 508: “There are only four kinds of consensual security known to English law: (i) pledge; (ii) contractual lien; (iii) equitable charge and (iv) mortgage. A pledge and a contractual lien both depend on the delivery of possession to the creditor. The difference between them is that in the case of a pledge the owner delivers possession to the creditor as security, whereas in the case of a lien the creditor retains possession of goods previously delivered to him for some other purpose. Neither a mortgage nor a charge depends on the delivery of possession. The difference between them is that a mortgage involves a transfer of legal or equitable ownership to the creditor, whereas an equitable charge does not.” [Back] Note 8 Including under section 75(2) of the Consumer Credit Act 1974. [Back] Note 9 The first reason given by Fry LJ for a right of distress not being a security may support the conclusion I have already reached – that the customer’ beneficial interests in the trust fund are not in the nature of security interests – because the beneficial interests can only be resorted to to compensate customers for non-performance of the DHPs or likely non-performance (in the case of insolvency). [Back] Note 10 There may be other reasons why they cannot rely on Section 5. Mr Groves contended that there were, but I do not need to consider the merits of those contentions. [Back] Note 11 Mr Wood also relied, in his skeleton argument, on Re OT Computers Ltd. [2004] Ch 317. That case is of no assistance because, as is clear from paragraph 6 of the judgment, the administrators of that company accepted that the funder in that case was subrogated to its customers’ rights. [Back] Note 12 The same cannot be said of the other alternative policy funders, because the detailed evidence provided by Mr Purdy during the hearing properly only extended to RateSetter’s decision-making process. As I explain below, I have concluded that RateSetter is not subrogated to its customers’ beneficial interests in the trust fund, even taking into account Mr Purdy’s evidence. It must follow that the other alternative policy funders are not subrogated to their customers’ beneficial interests, on the available evidence. [Back] Note 13 To similar effect, see Lord Mance in Swynson at [86]. [Back] Note 14 Banque Financière was a case in which the bank’s expectation was defeated and, as interpreted by the Supreme Court inSwynson, was a case in which the House of Lords acknowledged that a claimant can only be subrogated in equity if it is defeated in its expectation of some feature of the transaction in issue (see per Lord Sumption, inSwynson, at [24], [25], [30] and [31], and also Lord Mance at [70], [85] and [86] and Lord Neuberger at [118]). Indeed, that, to succeed, a claimant must establish a defeated expectation, is clear from Banque Financière itself; where the House of Lords considered whether the proposed remedy conferred a greater benefit on the bank than it had bargained for (see, for example, per Lord Hoffmann at page 234D-E). In the light of the conclusions I have already reached, Banque Financière does not assist RateSetter. In written submissions filed after the draft judgment was circulated, Mr Wood pointed out that, inBanque Financière, “the House of Lords was willing to grant a remedy for which the plaintiff had not bargained”. In that case, the bank was entitled to be subrogated. I have decided that the alternative policy funders are not entitled to be subrogated at all, so the court does not need to fashion a remedy for them. [Back] Note 15 Per Lord Templeman at page 737F-G. [Back] Note 16 See paragraph 34 of RateSetter’s statement of case. [Back] Note 17 See paragraph 22 of the judgment. [Back] Note 18 Although I will need to hear further from counsel, it may be appropriate for me to direct advertisements for customers’ claims and, in relation to those customers who do not respond, to order that the liquidator is permitted to distribute on the footing that those customers have disclaimed any beneficial interest they have in the trust fund. The share of the trust fund treated as having been disclaimed would then be held on a resulting trust for Carcraft. [Back] Note 19 I have reservations about whether the evidence supports the conclusion that the payments were mistaken in the necessary sense. [Back] Note 20 See, in particular, paragraph 62 of Mr Cawson’s skeleton argument. [Back] Note 21 As I noted in paragraph 11 above, the liquidator deliberately limited this argument to the PCL shares and the AIOF shares. [Back] Note 22 Although Mr Cawson suggested, thirdly, that, in the circumstances of this case, the PCL shares and the AIOF shares are subject to a Quistclose trust, it is not necessary, and I am not sure that it is helpful, or indeed correct, to view matters in that way. It is difficult to see, for example, how the Declaration of Trust only gives Carcraft (or the liquidator) a power to pay PCL’s or AIOF’s customers in the event of insolvency (rather than imposing a duty to do so, in accordance with and, at least, following the completion of a Customer Trust Account Schedule). [Back]