BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Wright v Cotias Investments Inc [2000] ScotCS 78 (23 March 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2000/78.html Cite as: [2000] ScotCS 78 |
[New search] [Help]
OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
|
|
OPINION OF LORD MACFADYEN in the cause MRS IRENE HILL WRIGHT Pursuer; against COTIAS INVESTMENTS INC Defenders:
________________ |
Pursuer: S. Kennedy; Balfour & Manson
Defenders: McNeill, Q.C., Marnie; Simpson & Marwick, W.S.
23 March 2000
Introduction
[1] In this action the pursuer's primary conclusions are for reduction of two documents, namely (1) a guarantee which she granted in favour of the defenders on 10 February 1998, and (2) a standard security over the heritable property at 3 Royal Terrace, Edinburgh, which she granted in favour of the defenders on 28 January 1998 and which was recorded in the Division of the General Register of Sasines for the County of Midlothian on 15 April 1998. She also concludes for reduction of a notice dated 14 December 1998 demanding payment in terms of the guarantee and of a notice dated 15 December 1998 calling up the standard security. In addition there is a conclusion for interdict and interim interdict against the defenders to prevent them from taking any steps to enforce the debt or exercise any rights under the standard security. There is presently in force an interim interdict granted on 11 June 1999 in terms somewhat more restricted than the conclusion.
[2] There is also in dependence an action at the instance of the present defenders against the present pursuer (case reference 8499; "the Cotias action"), in which they conclude for payment by her to them of the sum of £200,000 with interest, allegedly due in terms of the guarantee. The challenge to the validity of the guarantee, which is focused in the first conclusion in the present action, is the only defence to the Cotias action. Both actions were appointed to the same diet of debate, but the substantive submissions were made in the present action. It was matter of agreement that the result in this action would dictate the result in the Cotias action.
The Loan Transaction, the Guarantee and the Standard Security
[3] The guarantee and the standard security were granted by the pursuer in support of the obligations of the borrower in respect of a loan made by the defenders to a company called The Bond Corporation Limited ("Bond"). The circumstances which led up to the making of the loan and the granting of the guarantee and the standard security are set out in the pursuer's pleadings in some circumstantial detail, but not with complete clarity. The pursuer avers that she is a widow aged 69 years. Her involvement with the heritable subjects forming 3 Royal Terrace, Edinburgh ("the premises") began in 1957 when she and her late husband became proprietors of them. The pursuer became sole proprietor in 1969 on the death of her husband, and remains sole proprietor. It is averred that between 1986 and February 1998 various bar businesses (the details of which do not seem to me to matter for present purposes) were carried on from the premises, and that the pursuer was not "actively involved" in those business, which were under the management of one or other of her sons, Graham Wilson and Gordon Wilson. The pursuer does, however, admit that (at least latterly before Bond took over the business - it is not clear whether it was always the case) she held the liquor licence in respect of the premises. In about 1986 the pursuer granted a standard security over the premises in favour of Tennant Caledonian Breweries Limited (subsequently Bass Brewers Limited) in respect of a loan provided by them to the business. On 19 August 1997 Gordon Wilson was sequestrated. It is averred that after his sequestration Gordon Wilson, being anxious to be able to earn a living from the business which he had been conducting, that the business should be maintained, and that the pursuer should not be unduly worried about the financial position of the "company" (sic), consulted Messrs Wilson Terris & Co, Solicitors, regarding "various debts" incurred by the pursuer or by him and the pursuer jointly. He also confided in one Brian Morton, a customer who, it is averred, held himself out to be an experienced business man able to obtain access to bank borrowing, and who offered to assist him.
[4] The pursuer's averments then set out a scheme which was suggested by Brian Morton. The proposal is said to have been made in December 1997, and its main features were that a limited company should be incorporated to conduct the business at the premises, that Gordon Wilson should be employed by the company to manage the business, that Brian Morton should "deal with the financial arrangements for the company", and that Brian Morton and the pursuer should be equal shareholders in the company. The averments continue:
"He [Brian Morton] represented to Gordon Wilson that he could and would procure finance from Allied Irish Banks to provide adequate working capital for the new company. This proposition was put to the Pursuer. The Pursuer is elderly and had no relevant financial experience. She was very anxious to assist her son in his financial difficulties. She placed her trust in Brian Morton. She accordingly agreed to the suggestion made."
[5] The pursuer then avers that subsequent perusal of the files maintained by Wilson Terris & Co disclosed that there were standard securities in favour of each of the Royal Bank of Scotland, the Clydesdale Bank and Bass Brewers Limited, and that the total sum required as at February 1998 to obtain discharge of those standard securities was approximately £155,000. The pursuer's averments offer no explanation of when and how the standard securities (other than the one in favour of Bass Brewers Limited) came into existence. Although she avers that she had received no communication regarding them from Wilson Terris & Co between June 1997 and 9 January 1998, and believes and avers that that firm dealt with various demands for payment by secured and unsecured creditors on the instructions of Gordon Wilson and without instructions from her, there is no suggestion in her pleadings that the standard securities were not granted by her or were in any way invalid. It is averred, however, that decree by default was obtained by Bass Brewers Limited on 19 November 1997 and by Clydesdale Bank on 15 January 1998. Averments are made about meetings on 5 December 1997 and 7 January 1998 involving Gordon Wilson, Brian Morton, Grant Knight (a partner in Wilson Terris & Co) and (on the former occasion) one Patrick McDade. The pursuer avers that she was not involved in those meetings. It is, however, averred that at them it emerged that the intention was that a loan of £200,000 be obtained and applied towards redeeming the three secured loans and clearing other debts.
[6] Although the pursuer's pleadings are not particularly clear as to the chronology, it appears that the next significant stage in the development of the arrangements was a meeting that took place on 9 January 1998. The pursuer avers that she and her son, Gordon Wilson, attended the meeting with Gordon Russell and Grant Knight of Wilson Terris & Co. She avers that Grant Knight had acted for her previously and was acting for Gordon Wilson in connection with his sequestration. Various averments are made about the extent of the advice given by Wilson Terris & Co to the pursuer, but it is unnecessary to repeat them in detail here. It is averred that the pursuer and Gordon Wilson had understood from Gordon Wilson's earlier discussions with Brian Morton that the lender was to be Allied Irish Banks, and that the pursuer had had no intimation before the meeting on 9 January that the defenders were to be the lenders. Although the pleadings do not expressly state that this occurred at the meeting on 9 January, it is averred that Patrick McDade and Brian Morton intimated, "[at] very short notice, without any adequate explanation and to the surprise of the Pursuer and Gordon Wilson", that Allied Irish Banks were not prepared to lend to Bond, but that the defenders were prepared to lend. It is averred that Brian Morton had explained to Gordon Wilson that the defenders were an investment company in which an associate of his, Craig Fallon, had "a considerable interest and influence". It is not made clear when that explanation was given or whether the pursuer was present when it was. The averments continue by narrating that, given the precarious position of the business, Gordon Wilson was anxious that the funds be obtained urgently, and therefore agreed that borrowing be obtained from the defenders and "persuaded the pursuer also to agree". Whatever the precise chronology of the emergence of the proposal that the defenders should be the lenders may have been, the pursuer avers that during the meeting on 9 January she "signed the acceptance of the offer of loan from the defenders". The offer of loan is No. 6/6 of process. It is typed on the defenders' letterhead, dated 5 January 1998 and addressed to "Mrs Irene Wilson, Mr Brian Morton, Directors, The Bond Corporation Limited". The docquet of acceptance is signed by the pursuer and Brian Morton as directors, for and on behalf of The Bond Corporation Limited, and dated 9 January 1998. The pursuer avers that a company was "subsequently" incorporated and its name changed to The Bond Corporation Limited, but the defender's averment is that the date of incorporation was 8 January 1998, and that is borne out by the pursuer's averments in her petition to wind up Bond (No. 6/12 of process). It is averred that the pursuer and Brian Morton were appointed directors of Bond and that 5000 shares in Bond were issued to each of them. It was agreed that Grant Knight would become company secretary, and that the registered office should be at the offices of Wilson Terris & Co.
[7] Following the meeting on 9 January, the pursuer on 28 January 1998 granted the standard security which is the subject of the second conclusion (No. 6/2 of process) in security of Bond's indebtedness to the defenders. On 29 January she granted a twenty-five year lease of the premises (No. 6/5 of process) in favour of Bond. On 10 February she granted the guarantee which is the subject of the first conclusion (No. 6/1 of process). On 13 February the defenders advanced the sum of £200,000.
[8] Thereafter, it is averred, Bond continued the business operated from the premises. The pursuer's only involvement was to clean the premises. An agreement that she and Brian Morton would both sign company cheques was not implemented. Gordon Wilson was initially employed as front-of-house manager. Brian Morton made clear that he was to have sole control of finance, and instructed that the weekly takings of about £7000 be handed to him or an associate of his to enable them to be credited to Bond's bank account. The pursuer and Gordon Wilson believed that the takings were being so banked, and were being used to meet Bond's business debts including monthly payments to the defender, but they were not allowed to see the bank statements. The pursuer received no rent from Bond. Bond made only three monthly payments to the defenders, and thus created a situation of default. The business appeared to be trading properly, but the pursuer was not shown management accounts.
[9] The pursuer then avers that at a series of general meetings of Bond between 4 June and 5 August 1998 resolutions were moved by Brian Morton (i) to terminate the employment of Gordon Wilson, (ii) to appoint Patrick McDade as a director on 26 June, (iii) to appoint Craig Fallon as a director on 20 July and (iv) to allocate shares so as to leave the pursuer with a minority holding by 20 July. Some of those resolutions, which were seriously prejudicial to the pursuer's position, were carried by virtue of Brian Morton's use of his casting vote as chairman. At the meeting on 4 June the pursuer asked why Craig Fallon had, on a recent visit to the premises, claimed to have put money into the business, and Brian Morton explained that "Craig Fallon was the principal behind the defender and was concerned [that] his loan would not be repaid". It is averred that "Brian Morton then indicated that he wished to withdraw and be replaced by Craig Fallon". It is further averred that the pursuer did not attend the meeting on 20 July because she was alarmed and distressed by an incident in which a firearm was discharged outside her home a few days earlier. On later occasions further shots were fired near the pursuer's home. The police apprehended one Jimmy Singh, whom Craig Fallon had previously mentioned to Gordon Wilson as an associate of his. On 27 May 1999, Craig Fallon, Jimmy Singh and a third person were apprehended outside the premises and detained for three days. On the same date the pursuer received intimation that her legal aid application in connection with this action had been granted, and it is believed and averred that the defenders would also have received such intimation.
[10] The pursuer subsequently took independent legal advice and on 19 October 1998 presented a petition to wind up Bond. On the pursuer's motion, opposed by Wilson Terris & Co acting on behalf of Brian Morton, Craig Fallon and Patrick McDade, a provisional liquidator was appointed on 20 November. On 18 December the notices referred to in the third and fourth conclusions were served. The Cotias action was then raised on 24 December.
The Bad Faith Case
[11] The pursuer's first plea-in-law is in the following terms:
"The pretended Guarantee and the pretended Standard Security having been impetrated from the pursuer by the defender when the pursuer was easily imposed upon and the defender did not act in good faith, decree of reduction should be pronounced as first and second concluded for".
The averments in support of the bad faith aspect of the plea are to be found principally in article 10 of the condescendence where it is averred inter alia that:
"It was obvious to the defender that the Pursuer's relationship with her son, Gordon Wilson, with Brian Morton and with Bond were of such a nature that her consent to the granting of the Guarantee and the Standard Security was likely to be flawed. The defender took no steps either by itself or through its agents to advise the pursuer that she should obtain independent legal advice. By failing so to advise her, the defender was not acting in good faith in procuring from her the Guarantee and the Standard Security. Had the pursuer been independently advised she would not have agreed to grant the Guarantee or the Standard Security."
In response to the defenders' averments to the effect that she was fully advised by her own solicitors, the pursuer makes the following supplementary averments:
"Messrs Downie Aiton acted for the defender in connection with the loan. On 22 January 1998 they sent to Messrs Wilson Terris & Co a schedule of observations. These included the following:-
'... Please confirm or advise otherwise, that Mrs Wright is to obtain separate legal advice regarding her proposed granting of the Guarantee and Standard Security in our client's favour.'
By letter of 29 January 1998 Messrs Wilson Terris & Co responded saying
'3. We are acting on behalf of Mrs Wright as an individual and as a Director of the company. We are also acting on behalf of Mr Morton in his capacity as a Director of the company. Both parties have signed the appropriate conflict letters.'
It was apparent that the letter was being written on behalf of the Bond Corporation Ltd and thus that Messrs Wilson Terris & Co were acting also for Bond."
There then follow averments about the extent of the advice which the pursuer maintains she was given by Wilson Terris & Co, after which the averments about the defenders' position resume as follows:
"The loan was advanced in the full knowledge of the Defenders or at least in full knowledge of the Defenders' said agents that the Pursuer had not been advised independently about whether or not she should sign the Guarantee and the Standard Security. The Pursuer believes and avers that Brian Morton or Patrick McDade had explained in detail to the Directors or management of the Defender the arrangement which was proposed. In any event the Defender or its agents knew or ought to have known that the Pursuer had differing interests from Gordon Wilson, from Brian Morton and from Bond. It was therefore evident to the Defender that the Pursuer's consent might be flawed. The circumstances were such that there was a duty on the Defender to give the Pursuer certain advice before she became cautioner for Bond's debt. The circumstances were such that the Defender should reasonably have suspected that there might be factors bearing on the participation of the Pursuer which might undermine the validity of the Guarantee through her intimate relationship with the debtor. Having been aware of said circumstances, the Defender required to take certain steps to secure that it remained in good faith. Those steps included taking steps to ensure that the Pursuer was warned of the consequences of entering into the Guarantee and to advise that she obtained independent advice. When the Defender knew that the Pursuer had not had the benefit of advice independent of the advice being given to Bond, Brian Morton and Gordon Wilson, the Defender was not in good faith in relation to the proposed Guarantee. The Defender was aware of the Pursuer's vulnerable position. It did not act in good faith in impetrating the Guarantee and the Standard Security from the Pursuer".
[12] In making those averments the pursuer seeks to rely on the principle identified in Smith v Bank of Scotland 1997 SC (HL) 111. In that case the pursuer had joined with her husband in granting a standard security over their jointly owned matrimonial home in security of a business loan made by the defenders to a firm in which the pursuer's husband was a partner. She averred that she had been induced to concur in granting the standard security by misrepresentation on the part of her husband. The case was concerned with whether, and if so in what circumstances, the pursuer could rely on that misrepresentation in a question with the defenders as ground for reduction of the standard security so far as granted over her interest in the matrimonial home. The difficulty which had been held in this court to be fatal to the pursuer's case was identified by Lord Clyde in the House of Lords (at 116G-H and 117A and C) as follows:
"The general rule in the law of Scotland is that misrepresentations by a debtor which induce another person to enter into a cautionary obligation have no effect on the contract of caution. Indeed the proposition may be stated more generally that a voluntary obligation is not rendered open to challenge simply on the ground that it has been entered into as the result of a misrepresentation made by a third party. ... The general rule appears to hold in cases of undue influence ... and in cases of fraudulent misrepresentation. ... So also in cases of facility and circumvention the reduction of an onerous contract requires proof that the acts of circumvention were those of the other party or of an agent for him..."
Thereafter, having held that there were no sufficiently cogent grounds for refusing the extension to Scotland of the development of the law which had been achieved in England by the decision in Barclay's Bank v O'Brien [1994] 1 AC 180, but having rejected the option of effecting such extension by deploying the concept of constructive notice, Lord Clyde continued (at 121E):
"The law already recognises ... that there may arise a duty of disclosure to a potential cautioner in certain circumstances. As a part of that same good faith which lies behind that duty it seems to me to be reasonable to accept that there should also be a duty in particular circumstances to give the potential cautioner certain advice. Thus in circumstances where the creditor should reasonably suspect that there may be factors bearing on the participation of the cautioner which might undermine the validity of the contract through his or her intimate relationship with the debtor the duty would arise and would have to be fulfilled if the creditor is not to be prevented from later enforcing the contract. Such a duty does not alter the existing law regarding the duty, or the absence of a duty, to make representations. Nor does it carry with it a duty of investigation. This is simply a duty arising out of the good faith of the contract to give advice. It is unnecessary on the approach which I have suggested to deem the creditor a potential participant in any misrepresentation by the debtor. ...
In extending to Scotland the development of the law which was achieved in Barclays Bank plc v O'Brien it is desirable to say something more about what the effect of it should be. In the first place, the duty which arises on the creditor at the stage of the negotiation of the contract should only arise on the creditor if the circumstances of the case are such as to lead a reasonable man to believe that owing to the personal relationship between the debtor and the proposed cautioner the latter's consent may not be fully informed or freely given. ... It is unnecessary to attempt any further classification or analysis of the range of personal relationships. Given the range of circumstances in which persons may be prepared or prevailed upon to act as cautioners it seems to me unwise to endeavour to make any more precise formulation but to leave the matter to the application of common sense to the circumstances.
Secondly, if the duty arises, then it requires that the creditor should take certain steps to secure that he remains in good faith so far as the proposed transaction is concerned. Whether there has in fact been or may yet be any conduct by the debtor directed at the cautioner which might vitiate the contract is not a matter necessarily to be explored by the creditor. All that is required of him is that he should take reasonable steps to secure that in relation to the proposed contract he acts throughout in good faith. So far as the substance of those steps is concerned it seems to me that it would be sufficient for the creditor to warn the potential cautioner of the consequences of entering into the proposed cautionary obligation and to advise him or her to take independent advice."
[13] In Smith v Bank of Scotland the pursuer did not have the benefit of legal advice. In Forsyth v Royal Bank of Scotland (26 July 1999, unreported) I had occasion to consider the application of the Smith principle in a case in which the pursuer had the benefit of legal advice, albeit legal advice from solicitors who also acted for the lender and for the principal debtor. I expressed my conclusions as follows (at pages 28-30 of my Opinion):
"I am ... of opinion that the creditor is entitled to assume that a granter of a standard security who has the benefit of a solicitor acting for her will thereby have the benefit of separate advice, and that that advice will cover at least all the ground which he would, in the absence of a solicitor, have had to cover in order to preserve his good faith. Since he is entitled to make that assumption, the creditor is not in my opinion in breach of the requirements of good faith if he does nothing himself to advise or warn the granter of the security.
In the present case, of course, the solicitor in question was acting (so the defenders understood) not only for the pursuer, but also for her husband (the principal debtor) and the defenders (the creditors). Do those circumstances make a difference to the assumptions which the defenders were entitled to make about the receipt of information and advice by the pursuer from the solicitors? The mere fact that the solicitor is acting for more than one party in the transaction is not, in my view, sufficient to displace the creditor's entitlement to assume that the solicitor will, in his capacity as the solicitor to the granter of the security, fulfil his professional obligation to advise her about the nature and consequences of the transaction. It seems to me that part of the assumption that the solicitor will act properly is that he will pay due regard to the rules of professional conduct in relation to conflicts of interest. ... I am therefore of opinion that the fact that the solicitors appeared to be acting for both the pursuer and her husband was not sufficient to disentitle the defenders from assuming that it was unnecessary for them to intervene to explain the transaction to the pursuer and urge her to seek separate advice".
[14] The defenders' attack on the relevancy of the pursuer's pleadings in support of her first plea-in-law, when fully developed in the submissions made by Mr Marnie and Mr McNeill, was in three parts. In the first place, it was submitted that there were no relevant averments that the guarantee and the standard security were procured by facility and circumvention. In the second place, there were no relevant averments of the sort of "intimate relationship" or "personal relationship" between the principal debtor and the cautioner (which expression I use in the broad sense in which it was used by Lord Clyde in Smith to cover both the granter of a personal guarantee and the granter of a heritable security) that would give rise to a duty on the part of the lender, in order to preserve his own good faith, to warn the cautioner of the consequences of the transaction and advise her of the need take separate advice. Thirdly, even if such a relationship did exist, it was submitted that the pursuer's own averments disclosed either that the duty did not arise because there were circumstances that entitled the defenders to think that the pursuer was separately advised, or alternatively that the defenders had done all that was necessary to comply with their duty.
[15] The form of the pursuer's first plea-in-law, which asserts that the guarantee and the standard security were "impetrated from the pursuer by the defender when the pursuer was easily imposed upon and the defender did not act in good faith" (emphasis added), might at first sight be thought to be attempting to make a case of facility and circumvention against the defenders, on the basis that it was they who had perpetrated the circumvention. The addition of the reference to their good faith, however, makes it tolerably clear that the case which is sought to be made is a Smith v Bank of Scotland case, in which the assertion that the pursuer was easily imposed upon relates to imposition by others than the defenders. In my opinion Mr McNeill was correct in his submission that in any Smith v Bank of Scotland case the pursuer must, as well as making averments relevant to yield the inference that the lender was not in good faith, also make relevant averments of the circumstances which are said to undermine the validity of the cautioner's consent. In other words, relevant averments of bad faith on the part of the lender do not by themselves constitute ground for reduction of the contract of cautionary. The function of those averments is to deprive the lender of the benefit of the rule that a voluntary obligation is not rendered open to challenge simply on the ground that it has been entered into as a result of a misrepresentation made by a third party (or undue influence exerted by a third party, or circumvention practised on a facile contracting party by a third party). I do not regard as sound Mr Kennedy's submission that bad faith on the part of the defenders would by itself be ground for reduction. To make a relevant case there must in my view be both (a) relevant averments of misrepresentation, or undue influence, or facility and circumvention, by a third party and (b) relevant averments that the defenders were in bad faith.
[16] Mr McNeill accepted that averments of facility and circumvention would often have to go to proof before answer (see e.g. Pascoe-Watson v Brock's Executor 1998 SLT 40; Anderson v The Beacon Fellowship 1992 SLT 111; MacGilvray v Gilmartin 1986 SLT 89). In the present case, however, there were no sufficient averments of facility and circumvention to go to proof. He identified the following averments as all that the pursuer offered to prove:
These averments were to be seen in the context of the averment (in article 2) that in about 1986 the pursuer and her son, Graham Wilson, opened a business in the basement of the premises known as Chesterfields Bar, and that in that connection the pursuer granted a standard security over the premises; the averment (also in article 2) that at the end of 1997 Gordon Wilson consulted Wilson Terris & Co about various debts incurred by the pursuer or him and the pursuer jointly; the admission (in article 3) that the pursuer held the liquor licence for the premises; and the averment (in article 4) that [prior to the meeting on 9 January 1998] Grant Knight of Wilson Terris & Co had acted for the pursuer. In that context the averments made did not amount to a relevant case of facility and circumvention.
[17] In my view there is a danger that the full flavour of the pursuer's averments will be lost if parts of them are read in isolation. In particular, it seems to me that the range of averments which Mr McNeill sought to treat as the context of the averments of facility and circumvention might be extended to encompass the averments that the pursuer had not been actively involved in running the various businesses conducted from the premises, but had left the management to one or other of her sons; and the averments that Wilson Terris & Co dealt with matters relating to the debts of the business on the instructions of Gordon Wilson, without communicating with the pursuer herself. More generally, I consider that it is appropriate to read the pursuer's averments as a whole when seeking to determine whether they are relevant for inquiry on the question of facility and circumvention. That said, however, I am of opinion that Mr McNeill's attack on the relevancy of the averments in support of the first part if the pursuer's first plea-in-law is well-founded. There is, in my view, nothing said in the pursuer's averments to indicate that she was in a facile state of mind or that anything was done to impose on her while she was in that state of mind. The averments relating to her age, lack of relevant experience, non-involvement in the day-to-day conduct of the business of which she was the owner, and anxiety to assist her son in his financial difficulties in my view fall short of relevant averments of facility, just as the averments that her son persuaded her to agree to the scheme for borrowing from the defenders, and that she trusted Brian Morton, fall short of relevant averments of circumvention. As her averments disclose, she had solicitors acting for her in the matter. Although it may be that she has ground for complaint about the standard of service she received from them (I was informed that she has pending an action of damages for professional negligence against them), I do not consider that it assists her case of facility and circumvention to point to any inadequacies there may have been in the advice she received. Nor is this a case in which an absence of benefit from the transaction can be relied upon as helping to support a case of circumvention. Although the pursuer avers that the loan transaction and the undertaking of the related cautionary obligations "offered her no personal advantage on any objective view" (article 10), she admits that of the £200,000 advanced, £155,000 was used to repay her secured creditors. Whatever may have happened thereafter, the loan was made to a company of which she was a director and in which she held 50% of the issued share capital. In all the circumstances, reading the pursuer's pleadings as a whole, I am of opinion that there are no relevant averments of facility and circumvention or, more generally, of any ground on which her consent to the granting of the guarantee and the standard security might be said to have been flawed.
[18] The defenders' second submission against the relevancy of the averments in support of the pursuer's first plea-in-law focused on the absence of an averment of a personal or intimate relationship, in the sense indicated in Smith v Bank of Scotland, between the pursuer as cautioner and the principal debtor, Bond. The submission was founded on two passage in Lord Clyde's speech; first (at 121F) where his Lordship said that the duty to give certain advice, if good faith was to be preserved, would arise in circumstances where the creditor should reasonably suspect that there might be factors which might undermine the validity of the contract "through [the cautioner's] intimate relationship with the debtor", and secondly (at 121H) where his Lordship reiterated that the duty would only arise "if the circumstances of the case are such as to lead a reasonable man to believe that owing to the personal relationship between the debtor and the proposed cautioner the latter's consent may not be fully informed or freely given". Although it was accepted that the relationship of mother and son was a personal relationship of the sort contemplated, it was submitted that the existence of that relationship between the pursuer and Gordon Wilson in the present case was of no relevance, since Gordon Wilson was not the principal debtor, and what Lord Clyde referred to was a personal relationship between the principal debtor and the cautioner. In so far as the pursuer's averments put in issue her relationship with Brian Morton, that relationship was not of the sort contemplated. In the present case the principal debtor was Bond, a company of which the pursuer was a director and in which she was a 50% shareholder. That was not a relationship of the sort contemplated in Lord Clyde's formulation of the principle in Smith v Bank of Scotland. Whether one lifted the corporate veil, and thus saw the pursuer as truly one of the principal debtors, or did not do so, and therefore saw the pursuer as a director of and shareholder in the principal debtor, the situation was not one which suggested that the relationship might undermine the validity of the pursuer's consent. The repercussions of extending the principle of Smith v Bank of Scotland to cases where the cautioner was a director of and shareholder in the principal debtor would be profound and undesirable.
[19] Mr Kennedy for the pursuer pointed out that in Smith v Bank of Scotland Lord Clyde had declined (at 122A) to analyse the range of personal relationships that might suffice to bring the principle into operation. His Lordship pointed out that the range of circumstances in which persons may be prepared or prevailed upon to act as cautioners made it unwise to attempt a more precise formulation. Here, it was submitted, the material relationship was that between the pursuer and her son. The relationship of mother and son was one which had been held to fall within the scope of the equivalent English rule (Barclays Bank plc v O'Brien [1994] 1 AC 180, per Lord Brown-Wilkinson at 198E-F; Avon Finance Co Ltd v Bridger [1985] 2 All ER 281).
[20] In my opinion a lender comes under the obligation of good faith identified in Smith v Bank of Scotland only if the circumstances are such as to lead a reasonable man to believe that, because of the personal relationship between the principal debtor and the cautioner, the consent of the latter may not be fully informed or freely given (Smith v Bank of Scotland, per Lord Clyde at 121H). If the principal debtor were the son of the proposed cautioner, that would in my view be a sufficient personal relationship to give rise to such an obligation. On the other hand, there is in my view no warrant for extending the rule to apply to a case where the relationship is simply that the principal debtor is a company and the cautioner is a shareholder in and director of that company. Such a relationship gives no reason to suppose that the principal debtor, the company, has used the relationship to undermine the validity of the consent of the director and shareholder to act as a cautioner. To apply the rule in such circumstances would go very far beyond the circumstances contemplated in Smith v Bank of Scotland (see per Lord Clyde at 120F-G), and would have a very serious impact on commercial lending practice. It is, however, an over-simplification to regard the circumstances of the present case as falling into either the simple mother/son category or the simple company/director and shareholder category. It is therefore, in my view, necessary to examine the circumstances in more detail before deciding whether the rule may have been relevantly invoked by the pursuer in the present case.
[21] It seems to me that the present case does not fall into the simple mother/son category because the pursuer's son was not the principal debtor. But the rule can, in my view, apply even in circumstances where the person who is in a close personal relationship with the cautioner is not himself the borrower, provided he has an interest to use the personal relationship to prevail on the cautioner to agree to act as such, and the existence of that relationship is known to the creditor. Thus, in Smith v Bank of Scotland, the actual principal debtor appears to have been a firm of which the pursuer's husband was a partner, rather than the pursuer's husband as an individual. Likewise the English authorities include examples where the principal debtor was a company controlled by close relatives of the plaintiff (e.g. Bank of Baroda v Rayarel [1995] 2 FLR 376).
[22] Conversely, the present case is not in my view a simple example of a director of and shareholder in a company acting as cautioner for the debts of the company. That is because the company did not exist before the package of arrangements which included the loan, the guarantee and the standard security was devised. The incorporation of the company itself formed part of that package of arrangements. If the existing debt had been the debt of the pursuer's son or of a business which in one format or another belonged to him, and he had devised a scheme which, to the knowledge of the lender, involved the setting up of a company, the pursuer becoming a shareholder in and director of the company, a loan being made to the company, and the pursuer guaranteeing the company's obligations in respect of the loan, and granting heritable security for the loan over property belonging to her, I do not rule out the possibility that in such circumstances it might have been open to the pursuer to invoke the rule.
[23] In my view, however, the circumstances of the present case are not such as to entitle the pursuer to invoke the rule in Smith v Bank of Scotland. The circumstances which, in my view, combine to yield that result are (1) that the loan was necessary to re-finance an existing business, (2) that, albeit the pursuer avers that she was not actively involved in the business, the debts of that business were debts for which she was personally liable, (3) that the premises which belonged to the pursuer were the subject of heritable securities in respect of the debts of the business, (4) that the interest of the pursuer's son in the business was only that of an employee and was thus much less direct than her own, (5) that the re-financing package was designed to enable to the pursuer's existing borrowing to be repaid and the existing heritable securities over her property to be discharged, (6) that as part of that package Bond was set up and the pursuer became the holder of 50% of the issued share capital, as well as a director of the company, (7) that the guarantee which the pursuer granted was thus a guarantee of the indebtedness of a company of which she was to the extent of 50% the beneficial owner, and (8) the standard security which she granted was in security of the loan made to that company. Assuming that, as the pursuer avers, the proposed arrangement had been explained in detail to the defenders, I am of opinion that the circumstances are not such as to be capable of leading them, as reasonable men, to believe that owing to the personal relationship between the pursuer and her son her consent to the granting of the guarantee and the standard security might not be fully informed or freely given.
[24] The third branch of the defenders' attack on the relevancy of the averments in support of the pursuer's first plea-in-law arises out of the circumstance that at the material time the pursuer had solicitors acting for her. In opening his submissions on this point, Mr Marnie referred to the passage in the speech of Lord Clyde in Smith v Bank of Scotland where his Lordship said (at 122C) that it would be sufficient for a creditor "to warn the potential cautioner of the consequences of entering into the proposed cautionary obligation and to advise him or her to take independent advice". Mr Marnie then referred to the passages from my own opinion in Forsyth v Royal Bank of Scotland which I have quoted in paragraph [10] above. He also drew my attention to paragraph 49 of the judgment in Royal Bank of Scotland v Etridge [1998] 4 All ER 705 at 722g, which identified circumstances which would constitute exceptions to the normal entitlement of a lender to assume that a solicitor asked to advise the granter of the security would discharge his duties fully and competently, instancing the case where he knows or ought to know that the assumption is false, the case where the lender has material information not available to the solicitor and the case where the transaction is one into which no competent solicitor could properly advise a client to enter. He referred further to Credit Lyonnais v Burch [1997] 1 All ER 144, in which the bank was held not to have done enough by urging Miss Burch, a junior employee who granted a personal guarantee and a second charge over her flat in security of her employer's business overdraft, to obtain independent legal advice. It was held that her reply declining to do so could not reasonably have allayed suspicion that she was the subject of undue influence, because it was obviously written at the instance of the employer and after consultation with him. Against that background of authority, Mr McNeill submitted that if, contrary to his earlier submissions, the circumstances were such that in order to preserve their good faith the defenders required to take the steps contemplated in Smith v Bank of Scotland, it was clear on the pursuer's pleadings and the documents that they had done so. In the first place, he pointed to the guarantee (No. 6/1 of process) and in particular to the warnings printed both at the beginning of the document and at the end just before the place for the granter's signature. The text which appears at the beginning in block capitals is as follows:
"Important. By signing this guarantee and indemnity you may become liable instead of or as well as the company's customer. The maximum which you may be required to pay is limited to the sums referred to below."
The text at the end of the document is to the same effect, with the added warning, again in block capitals:
"You should take independent legal advice before signing this guarantee and indemnity".
In the second place, he pointed to the exchange of correspondence between Downie Aiton and Wilson Terris & Co on 22 and 29 January 1998 (quoted in paragraph [11] above). By checking whether Wilson Terris & Co were acting for the pursuer, and obtaining their confirmation that they were, the defenders' agents had done all that was necessary to preserve the defenders' good faith. Where the cautioner was represented by solicitors, and there had been an exchange of letters of that character, it was, Mr McNeill submitted, almost inconceivable that there could be circumstances disabling the defenders from relying on the contract. The defenders could not be expected to say to a guarantor: "You must seek advice from someone other than your present solicitors; we do not consider that they are offering you independent advice."
[25] Mr Kennedy did not, as I understood him, challenge the soundness of the views which I expressed in Forsyth v Royal Bank of Scotland. He submitted, however, that the involvement of Wilson Terris & Co, as explained in the correspondence, was not enough to elide the need for the defenders to take the steps desiderated in Smith v Bank of Scotland. Moreover, there were other circumstances which justified making an exception to the proposition that such steps need not be taken when the cautioner has solicitors acting for her. So far as the exchange of correspondence was concerned, he pointed out that the question which Downie Aiton asked was whether the pursuer was going to obtain separate legal advice regarding her proposed granting of the guarantee and the standard security, and the response made it clear that she was not going to obtain independent legal advice, because Wilson Terris & Co were acting also for Bond and for Brian Morton. For the defenders to proceed without taking any further steps to warn or advise the pursuer was insufficient to preserve their good faith. In addition he relied on the following further circumstances:
In all these circumstances it could not be said that the pursuer was bound to fail after proof to show that the defenders had not taken all the steps necessary to preserve their good faith.
[26] This part of the defenders' submissions falls to be considered on the assumption that, contrary to their earlier submissions, the pursuer has made relevant averments of facility and circumvention and relevant averments that the circumvention had been effected by a party who was or had an interest in the principal debtor and was in a personal or intimate relationship with the pursuer in the sense desiderated in Smith v Bank of Scotland. I adhere to the view which I expressed in Forsyth v Royal Bank of Scotland that the need for the creditor to take active steps to preserve his good faith in such a situation by warning the cautioner of the consequences of granting the cautionary obligation and advising her to take independent advice will ordinarily be elided if it appears to the creditor that the cautioner already has a solicitor acting for her. The creditor is entitled to assume that the solicitor will give his client appropriate advice. That is ordinarily so even where the solicitor acts both for the cautioner and for the principal debtor, because the lender is entitled to assume that the solicitor will give proper advice about the effect of the potential conflict of interest. A cautioner who has the benefit of a solicitor acting for her is thus ordinarily in the same position as would be achieved by the creditor advising her to seek independent advice. There is therefore no need for the creditor to do so. Although I have quoted in paragraph [13] above only certain conclusions from my Opinion in Forsyth v Royal Bank of Scotland, I adopt in its entirety my reasoning in support of those conclusions, as set out at pages 25 to 32. I conclude from the terms of the correspondence between Downie Aiton and Wilson Terris & Co that the defenders, through their solicitors, asked for confirmation that Wilson Terris & Co were acting for the pursuer in relation to the granting of the guarantee and the standard security and received an affirmative answer to that question. It is to be remembered that the approach suggested by Lord Clyde in Smith v Bank of Scotland requires the creditor to advise the cautioner to obtain separate advice, not to ensure that she does so. When it is confirmed that the cautioner has a solicitor acting for her, albeit also acting for the principal debtor, the creditor need in my view generally do no more. The creditor is entitled to assume that the solicitor will act properly in advising his client, and that will include, if there is a conflict of interest making separate advice necessary or advisable, advising to that effect. Here Wilson Terris & Co advised Downie Aiton that the pursuer had signed "the appropriate conflict letter", by which I understand them to have meant a letter acknowledging that she had been advised of the potential conflict of interest but wished Wilson Terris & Co to continue to act for her. Mr McNeill was, in my view, correct in his submission that the lender could not be expected in these circumstances to go any further. They could not insist that the pursuer withdraw her instructions from Wilson Terris & Co and instruct other solicitors to advise her separately. The matters that the defenders were, in my view, entitled to assume that the pursuers' solicitors would deal with in advising her in relation to the guarantee and the standard security included the nature of the contracts and their effect. In these circumstances it is unnecessary for me to reach a conclusion as to whether the warnings printed at the beginning and end of the guarantee would, in the absence of solicitors advising the pursuer, have been sufficient to preserve the defenders' good faith. I prefer to reserve my opinion on that point. I would observe, however, that any effect of those warnings would be confined to the guarantee and would not affect the standard security, particularly
[27] I have considered all of the additional circumstances on which Mr Kennedy founded in submitting, in effect, that I should not in the present case apply the reasoning that I applied in Forsyth v Royal Bank of Scotland. I do not consider that individually or in cumulo they are capable of justifying the conclusion that the defenders failed to take steps necessary to preserve their good faith. The loan contract was, no doubt, an onerous one and the structure of the scheme was more complex than it might have been. These were, however, matters upon which the defenders were, after receiving the response their solicitors did from Wilson Terris & Co, entitled to assume would be properly considered on the pursuer's behalf by Wilson Terris & Co. They do not, in my view, disclose a situation in which no competent solicitor could have advised the pursuer to grant the guarantee or the standard security (c.f. Royal Bank of Scotland v Etridge, page 722g, paragraph 49). The discrepancy between the standard security and the loan offer (which, as I shall discuss later, the pursuer now seeks to make the subject of rectification proceedings) does not in my view undermine the defenders' good faith.
[28] In all the circumstances, I am of opinion that each of the three branches of the defenders' attack on the relevancy of the pursuer's pleadings in support of her first plea-in-law is well-founded. I conclude that the pursuer has not made relevant averments in support of that plea-in-law, and that it should therefore be repelled.
The Misrepresentation Case
[29] The pursuer's second plea-in-law is in the following terms:
"Separatim the Pursuer having been induced to enter into the contract involving the Guarantee and the Standard Security by the fraudulent misrepresentation of Patrick McDade and Brian Morton acting in concert with or as agents for the Defenders, for whose representations the Defenders are answerable, the said Guarantee and Standard Security should be reduced as first concluded for."
The averments which the pursuer makes in support of that plea-in-law are set out in article 13 of the condescendence. I propose to quote them virtually in full, and in doing so I shall highlight the averments which bear to relate to representations made to the pursuer, along with those which, although not expressed in terms of representation were relied upon as such in Mr Kennedy's submissions. Article 13 is in the following terms:
"Separatim the Guarantee and Standard Security were impetrated from the Pursuer by misrepresentations made by Patrick McDade and Brian Morton in furtherance of a prior agreement amongst Brian Morton, Patrick McDade, Craig Fallon and the Defenders. Said prior agreement was intended to deceive the Pursuer and was fraudulent. The issued share capital of the Defenders is held by the Cotias Trust in which Craig Fallon has an interest and is a protector. Craig Fallon is in a position to influence the Defenders. Brian Morton represented to Gordon Wilson in about December 1997 that he could obtain finance for the business from a bank such as Allied Irish banks. He introduced Patrick McDade to Gordon Wilson as having a connection with Allied Irish Banks. The picture conveyed by Brian Morton and Patrick McDade to Gordon Wilson and by him to the pursuer was of a refinancing package with a reputable bank. Brian Morton and Patrick McDade were aware that there was significant secured debt as at December 1997. As experienced businessmen they knew that the trading history and the existing debt were such that Allied Irish Banks or any other major lending institution would be unlikely to be prepared to lend. Brian Morton did not express doubt about that to Gordon Wilson or to the Pursuer. He expressed interest in becoming a Director and shareholder in The Bond Corporation Ltd. He arranged contrary to the earlier agreement that he with his assistant David Cowan would be the sole signatories for the company's bank account to the exclusion of the Pursuer. He insisted that the net takings be transferred from the Royal Terrace premises to his home. He represented to the pursuer that the Accountant employed by him there would deal with financial matters for Bond including paying creditors, particularly the Defenders. He arranged that the said Accountant would calculate the net amount to be paid to each member of staff after deduction of appropriate tax and National Insurance contributions. It is believed and averred that no payments were made to the Inland Revenue in respect of the tax and National Insurance contributions which were duly deducted although these payments should have been made by or on the instruction of Brian Morton. Brian Morton has failed to produce Bond's bank statements to the provisional liquidator or to the Receiver of Bond or in connection with these proceedings. Brian Morton suggested to the Pursuer that he should be the Chairman of Bond without explaining when he did so that that would give him the advantage of having the casting vote which he then used to the Pursuer's extreme prejudice. He represented to the Pursuer that he wished to be involved with Bond for a significant period but then intimated without any adequate reason after only a few months in office that he wished to resign as Director and be replaced by Craig Fallon. He has failed to give any accounting for the funds removed by him from Bond's premises. It is believed and averred that at least some of these funds have been applied to the credit of other businesses controlled by Brian Morton. From the loan funds of £200,000, Brian Morton obtained payment of sums totalling £11,000 without either formal approval from the Pursuer or Bond or satisfactory explanation of the reason for the payment of £10,000 (sic). Patrick McDade introduced himself as having a connection with Allied Irish Banks and being able to obtain finance for the business. He took a commission of £5000 for having introduced the Defenders to Bond that commission being paid by Bond. He was accordingly acting as an agent for Bond and owed a duty of care and good faith to Bond. Any financial adviser offering to procure finance would have investigated the availability of alternative sources of financing. Patrick McDade made no such inquiries. He did not warn Bond or the Pursuer of the obvious prejudicial arrangements with the defen
[30] Mr Marnie began his submissions in respect of this aspect of the pursuer's case by referring to McBryde on Contract, page 225, § 10-61(3)(a):
"... it is settled law that there must be specific averments of fraud";
and Gillespie v Russel (1857) 18 D 667 per Lord President McNeill at 684:
"... fraud is, in many cases, a sufficient ground for breaking down the usual rules of law, but not for breaking down the rule, that the parties must be very specific in stating the grounds of reduction. On the contrary, allegations of fraud render it peculiarly necessary to have directness of statement."
(See also at 682, a passage referred to by Mr Kennedy.) Moreover, Mr Marnie submitted, if fraudulent misrepresentation was founded on, the terms of the misrepresentation must be clearly set out (Drummond's Trustees v Melville, (1861) 23 D 450 per Lord President McNeill at 463; Shedden v Patrick (1854) 1 Macq. 535 per Lord Fullerton at 581 and 589, approved by Lord Chancellor Cranworth at 615).
[31] Mr Marnie submitted that, despite the wide-ranging character of the pursuer's averments, there were only two distinct averments which bore to allege representations made directly or indirectly to the pursuer. The first (made initially in the passage quoted from article 3 of the condescendence in paragraph [4] above and repeated in slightly different terms in the first highlighted passage in article 13 of the condescendence set out in paragraph [29] above) was the averment that Brian Morton represented that he could (and would) obtain finance for the business from Allied Irish Banks (or a similar bank). That alleged representation could not have induced the pursuer to enter into the guarantee and the standard security, because by the time she did so it was clear from her own averments that she knew that the defenders, rather than Allied Irish Banks or any other bank, were the lenders (see, for example, article 5 of the condescendence where it is averred that Gordon Wilson persuaded the pursuer to agree that borrowing be obtained from the defenders). Knowledge on the part of the pursuer of the true state of affairs before she entered into the contracts was fatal to an assertion that she had been induced to contract by the misrepresentation (Irvine v Kirkpatrick (1850) 7 Bell's App. 186 per Lord Brougham at 237). In any event, Mr McNeill added, there was no offer by the pursuer to prove that the representation was false, and known to be false when it was made.
[32] The second averment of representation identified by Mr Marnie was the one set out in the third passage highlighted in my quotation from article 13 of the condescendence in paragraph [29] above, namely the averment that Brian Morton represented that he wished to be involved with Bond for a significant period. Mr Marnie's point in relation to that averment was simply that there was no allegation that that representation induced the pursuer to grant the guarantee and the standard security. Mr McNeill added that the averment was not truly an averment of a misrepresentation of fact: it could not be inferred from the fact that Brian Morton resigned as a director after a relatively short time that at the time he said he wished to be involved with Bond for a significant period he did not genuinely entertain that wish. It was odd, he suggested, to find the pursuer complaining that Brian Morton did not adhere to his expressed wish to be involved with Bond for a significant period when, elsewhere in her pleadings, she accused him of embezzlement from Bond.
[33] Mr Marnie's next point was that the pursuer sought to bring home responsibility for the alleged misrepresentations to the defenders by means of the assertion in the first two sentences of article 13 of the condescendence that the misrepresentations were made in furtherance of a prior agreement between Brian Morton, Patrick McDade, Craig Fallon and the defenders, which was "intended to deceive the Pursuer and was fraudulent" (c.f. the pursuer's second plea-in-law which refers to concert or agency). There were no relevant averments either of concert or of agency. The assertion of a prior fraudulent agreement was hopelessly lacking in specification. Such averments as there were about Craig Fallon's relationship with the defenders were not, Mr McNeill submitted, adequate to support the conclusion that responsibility for his actings should be laid at the door of the defenders. The result was that there were no relevant averments in support of the pursuer's second plea, and it should therefore be repelled.
[34] Mr Kennedy explained that the pursuer's suspicion was that the true intention of the defenders from the outset of the transaction was to obtain control of the premises at 3 Royal Terrace and of the business conducted there. She was not in a position to make positive averments about what passed between the defenders and the others involved in the prior agreement averred at the beginning of article 13 of the condescendence. What had been done instead was (i) to point to a number of circumstances from which, if proved, the inference might be drawn that the intention of the defenders and the other involved was not to make available a commercial loan, but rather to achieve the take-over of the business, and (ii) to identify misrepresentations which had induced the pursuer to enter into the guarantee and the standard security and which could be seen to have been made in pursuance of the prior agreement and thus to be misrepresentations for which the defenders could properly be held responsible. It was not essential to the pursuer's case that the circumstances averred be held to justify the inference that the defenders' objective was the take-over of the business; what was required was simply sufficient to found the inference that there was a prior agreement to which the defenders were parties and that the misrepresentations founded on had been made in pursuance of that agreement.
[35] Mr Kennedy accepted that by the time Gordon Wilson approached Brian Morton, the business operating at 3 Royal Terrace was in need of a "rescue package". Brian Morton offered a rescue package. Subsequent events set out in the pursuer's averments showed that he was in fact no white knight, but was intent from the outset upon manipulating the situation to his own benefit. His appropriation to himself of the position of chairman of Bond, with the benefit of a casting vote; his insistence on handling the financial affairs of Bond to the exclusion of the pursuer and her son; his use of his casting vote to procure the dismissal of Gordon Wilson from the employment of Bond, the removal of the pursuer as a director, the introduction of Patrick McDade and Craig Fallon as directors, and the issue of additional shares to the effect of reducing the pursuer's shareholding to a minority; all of these circumstances were eloquent of there having existed from the outset an agenda concealed from the pursuer. The significance of the representations about Brian Morton's ability to procure finance from Allied Irish Banks (reinforced by Patrick McDade's representation that he too was in such a position - see the fourth passage highlighted in my quotation from article 13 of the condescendence in paragraph [29] above) was not that the pursuer was led to believe that it was Allied Irish Banks with whom she was contracting - that was plainly not so; she knew that the defenders were the lenders - but that the representation led her to regard Brian Morton as a person worthy of her trust, whose scheme for rescue of the business could be accepted. The representation about Brian Morton's wish to be involved with Bond for a significant period operated in the same way, to lead the pursuer to trust him. Once these misrepresentations had led her to trust Brian Morton and accept his scheme, she was in a position in which she was willing to accept the substitution of the defenders as the lenders when that was sprung upon her. She was, in effect, "softened up" by the belief that Brian Morton was able to arrange finance from Allied Irish Banks and was committed to the company in the long term, so that the misrepresentations were what led her to enter into the transactions with the defenders. She would not have done that if the misrepresentations had not been made. Mr Kennedy also relied on the fourth passage which I have highlighted in my quotation in paragraph [29] above. Given the averment of the duties owed by Patrick McCabe, the averments of failure on his part to warn the pursuer of the prior agreement were tantamount to averments of misrepresentation. If disclosure had been made, the pursuer would not have entered into the transaction.
[36] The second passage highlighted in paragraph [29] above was not mentioned by Mr Kennedy or by the defenders' counsel in argument. I have highlighted it simply because it is expressed as being a representation. I assume, however, that it was not founded on because it did not ante-date the granting of the guarantee and the standard security. It is therefore unnecessary to say anything more about it.
[37] So far as the alleged prior agreement among Brian Morton, Patrick McCabe, Craig Fallon and the defenders was concerned, Mr Kennedy submitted that there was no other explanation which fitted all the facts averred. Particular emphasis was placed on the averments about the actings of Craig Fallon. It was submitted that if it could be seen that he was acting in bad faith, the defenders could not avoid the inference that they too were in bad faith, given the averments about his position as protector of the Cotias Trust and the fact that that body held the share capital of the defenders.
[38] In my opinion the pursuer's case of fraudulent misrepresentation requires, if it is to be relevant, clear averments on a number of matters. In examining the relevancy of the averments in support of that case it is in my view appropriate to bear in mind the well-established rule that averments of fraud must be made with a high degree of clarity and specification. In the present case the pursuer must in my opinion aver clearly (i) the representation or representations which she claims were made to her, (ii) that that representation was, or those representations were, untrue; (iii) that the maker of each representation knew at the time when he made it that it was false; (iv) that she was induced by that representation or those representations to enter into the contracts which she now seeks to have reduced; and (v) that there existed at the time when each representation was made a relationship between the maker of the representation and the defenders which in law justifies holding the defenders responsible for the representation.
[39] In my opinion the averments relating to the first of the representations founded on, namely that Brian Morton could and would obtain finance from Allied Irish Banks, contains a number of difficulties for the pursuer. In the first place, as expressed in the pleadings, it is not clear that that was truly a representation of fact; it might be regarded as a mere boast as to what could be achieved in the future rather than a statement of present fact. Mr Kennedy shifted emphasis from the obtainability of finance from the stated source to the light in which the claim cast the trustworthiness of the maker of the representation. The matter is not clearly presented in that way in the pleadings, and it does not seem to be to be obvious that objectively (however the pursuer may have regarded it) a statement that an individual can obtain finance from a particular institution is tantamount to a statement that he is worthy of trust in business matters. In the second place, however, it seems to me that the pursuer cannot relevantly claim that the representation that Brian Morton was able to obtain finance from Allied Irish Banks induced her to enter into the transaction with the defenders including the granting of the guarantee and the standard security, when it is obvious that by the date when she did so it had become clear that such finance from Allied Irish Banks had not been obtained by him. If the representation that he could obtain finance from that source impressed the pursuer as to his trustworthiness, I do not see how she could claim still to retain and be influenced by that impression of trustworthiness after it had turned out that, contrary to his claim, he could not in fact obtain finance from that source.
[40] So far as the second representation is concerned, it seems to me that the principal difficulty for the pursuer is in presenting it as a false representation of fact. All that is said is that Brian Morton represented that he wished to be involved with Bond for a significant period, and that he in fact resigned as a director after only a few months. Nothing is said to rule out the possibility that he simply changed his mind. Although Mr Kennedy said in the course of his submissions that the allegation was that the representation was untrue when it was made, the mere fact that Brian Morton resigned after a few months is an inadequate basis for an inference to that effect.
[41] So far as the representation by Patrick McDade, that he had a connection with Allied Irish Banks and was able to obtain finance for the business, is concerned, the same reasoning applies, in my view, as applies to the similar representation attributed to Brian Morton. The averments about failure in duty by Patrick McDade are in my view, at least in part, irrelevant to the question of misrepresentation. The aspect of them which might be regarded as tantamount to a misrepresentation is the averred failure to warn the pursuer of the existence of the "obviously prejudicial arrangements". That could be relevant only if there were relevant averments that those arrangements existed prior to the date on which the pursuer executed the challenged deeds. Whether there are such averments is a question which arises sharply in the context of whether the pursuer has made relevant averments to support the proposition that the defenders are responsible for the alleged misrepresentations. I shall discuss the point in that context.
[42] The pursuer seeks to hold the defenders responsible for the misrepresentations allegedly made by Brian Morton and Patrick McCabe on the ground that they were made in furtherance of a prior agreement - in effect a fraudulent conspiracy - among Brian Morton, Patrick McCabe, Craig Fallon and the defenders. For that approach to be relevant, there would, in my view, require to be averments (of the degree of clarity requisite for an allegation of fraud) from which it could properly be inferred that such an agreement existed before the misrepresentations were made. It is, to my mind, significant that Mr Kennedy began his submission on this aspect of the case by explaining the nature of the suspicion that the pursuer entertains. There is, in my view, in the circumstances averred by the pursuer at least ground for suspicion as to the motives, and indeed the honesty, of Brian Morton and to perhaps a lesser extent Patrick McCabe. The suspicion may also attach to Craig Fallon. The precise nature of his relationship with the defenders is not entirely clear. The matter is made more obscure by the fact that the nature of the position of "protector" of a trust according to the law of Vanuatu is not made clear. I would be disinclined to hold that against the pursuer. It is not, however, in my view clear that the relationship is such that the acts of the defenders must be held to be acts of Craig Fallon; still less that the acts of Craig Fallon must be held to be acts of the defenders. Suspicion is not, however, in my view enough. The averments can only be relevant, in my opinion, if they properly support an inference that there was a prior fraudulent agreement to which the defenders were parties and in implement of which the alleged misrepresentations were made. Mr McNeill candidly conceded that if the pursuer's claim had been one for damages for conspiracy to defraud, the averments which she has made might well have been habile to be remitted to probation. Whether that be right or not, the issue in the present case is much narrower. As I have said, I take the view that the pursuer would have to aver circumstances yielding the inference that the fraudulent agreement was already in place, with the defenders parties to it, before the misrepresentations were made. It seems to me to be doubtful whether enough has been said to support the inference that the defenders were ever involved in an agreement designed to defraud the pursuer. More importantly, however, I am of opinion that the circumstances averred are quite insufficient to support the inference that a fraudulent scheme involving the defenders as participants was already in place when the representations were made and the guarantee and the standard security were executed. If fraud there was, the circumstances seem to me to be consistent with an opportunistic fraud developing after the documents in question had been executed. If the defenders were involved, there is in my view nothing to yield the inference that their involvement ante-dated the making of the alleged misrepresentations.
[43] For the reasons discussed in the last five paragraphs, I am of opinion that the pursuer's second plea-in-law is not supported by relevant and specific averments, and should be repelled.
The Relevancy of Article 9 of the Condescendence
[44] Mr Marnie advanced a subsidiary argument to the effect that if a proof was to be allowed, the averments in article 9 of the condescendence should be excluded from probation. Those averments relate to the alleged firearms incidents in the vicinity of the pursuer's home at the time of the meeting of 20 July 1998, and to the apprehension of Craig Fallon and others outside the premises at about the time when the pursuer's legal aid application was granted. In the event, the point does not arise, but I should record the view which I would have taken if it had been live. My view is that the averments in question are not appropriate to be admitted to probation. They comprise no more than vague hints and insinuations. To be relevant they would require, in my view, to state clearly what the allegation intended to be made is, and that allegation would require to have a bearing on the issues raised in the case. I would accordingly have excluded article 9 of the condescendence from probation, had I otherwise been minded to allow a proof before answer.
Result
[45] For the reasons which I have set out I am of opinion that neither the pursuer's first plea-in-law nor her second plea-in-law is supported by relevant and specific averments. The pursuer's third plea-in-law, which relates to the conclusions for reduction of the notices of 14 and 15 December 1998, stands or falls with the first two pleas, since the only ground on which the validity of the notices is challenged is that they proceeded on deeds which were themselves invalid. I shall therefore sustain the defenders' first plea-in-law to the extent of repelling the pursuer's first, second and third pleas-in-law and granting decree of dismissal in respect of the first, second, third and fourth conclusions of the summons.
Further Procedure
[46] A few days before the diet of debate, Mr Kennedy tendered a minute of amendment seeking to introduce a conclusion for rectification of the standard security, and relative averments. At the debate Mr McNeill tendered answers. I allowed both documents to be received, but made no further order in respect of them at that stage. Briefly the point which the pursuer seeks to raise in the minute of amendment is that the loan contract contemplated that the standard security would be in security of the pursuer's indebtedness under the guarantee, but the standard security as executed secures all sums due to the defenders by Bond. In the event, it will be necessary to consider what further procedure is required in respect of the minute of amendment.
[47] The interim interdict granted on 11 June 1999 was designed to preserve the status quo pending determination of the pursuer's claims for reduction. Strictly, therefore, now that I have dismissed the conclusions for reduction, the interim interdict is spent. Parties were agreed, however, that if the rectification issue is to be litigated, there may be need for a continuing interim interdict, albeit not in precisely the same terms, or alternatively an undertaking in its place. I have therefore not yet recalled the interim interdict.
[48] In these circumstances I shall put the case out By Order to enable parties to present submissions as to (i) the procedure to be adopted in relation to the minute of amendment and the claim for rectification of the standard security, and (ii) whether, and if so in what terms, the interim interdict should continue in force.