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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Henderson & Anor v Royal Bank Of Scotland Plc [2008] ScotCS CSOH_146 (17 October 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_146.html
Cite as: 2008 GWD 34-518, [2008] CSOH 146, 2008 SCLR 823, [2008] ScotCS CSOH_146

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2008] CSOH 146

 

A877/06

 

 

OPINION OF LORD WOOLMAN

 

in the cause

 

(FIRST) NIGEL HENDERSON and

(SECOND) NORMA HENDERSON

 

Pursuers;

 

against

 

ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC

 

Defenders:

 

 

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­________________

 

 

 

Pursuers: A.M. Clark, Q.C.; Semple Fraser

Defenders: R.W.J. Anderson, Q.C., Kinnear; Brodies

 

17 October 2008

Background
[1] In this action, Mr and Mrs Henderson seek damages for alleged negligent misrepresentation and breach of contract on the part of the defenders ("RBS"). An earlier action arising out of the same circumstances was dismissed by Lady Smith on 18 October 2006. That action proceeded on the basis of different pleadings. RBS argued, however, that the present formulation of the claim was also irrelevant and should likewise be dismissed.

[2] The facts relied on by the pursuers are as follows. In 1997 they approached RBS to seek funds to purchase the Portree Hotel in Skye. The hotel was to be bought in name of the firm of Henderson Hotels, in which the pursuers were partners. Each pursuer obtained a loan of £400,000 from RBS ("the Loans"). The Loans were to be repaid over a period of 15 years with an interest rate of 10.22 per cent per annum. Under the loan agreements, which were signed in July 1997, the pursuers could make early repayment of the Loans, subject to paying "Breakage Charges" to RBS. It was expressly stated that those charges could be "substantial".

[3] The following year, the pursuers sold another property, the Park Hotel in Montrose. The net free proceeds of sale amounted to about £850,000. At that date, the outstanding capital balance on the Loans stood at around £760,000. The pursuers were advised by their accountant to consider paying off the Loans, having regard to the high fixed interest rate.

[4] Mr Henderson arranged to meet Mr Scanlon, a Business Relationship Manager at RBS, to discuss matters. At the meeting in early November 1998, Mr Henderson indicated that he and his wife wished to repay the Loans. Mr Scanlon reminded him of the Breakage Charges and said he would find out the amount required. On 11 November 1998, he telephoned Mr Henderson and told him that the Breakage Charge for each Loan would be £120,000. Relying on that information and acting on the advice of their accountant, the pursuers decided that it would be uneconomic to repay the Loans. Instead they placed the free proceeds of sale on deposit with the defenders ("the deposit monies").

[5] During 1999 the turnover of the Portree Hotel declined. The high cost of servicing the Loans placed a significant burden on the business. The pursuers applied some of the deposit monies for that purpose. In late October 1999, Mr Henderson had a meeting with the defenders' Specialised Lending Services Department to discuss repayment of the Loans. At the meeting, it was indicated by the representative of RBS that it was also keen to reduce the pursuers' debt.

[6] By letter dated 3 November 1999, RBS informed the pursuers that the Breakage Charge was only £21,580.32 for each loan, much less than the figure given the previous year. On 8 November 1999, Mr Henderson instructed RBS to apply the balance of the Deposit monies to repay his wife's Loan. At the same time, he asked them to use the remaining amount to reduce the overdraft on the current account in name of the Portree Hotel. Those instructions were not implemented. Instead RBS stated in its reply of 11 November 1999 that the Breakage Charges had increased by £12,000 for each Loan. It also insisted that the monies be used first to extinguish the overdraft on the Portree Hotel current account.

[7] No further steps were taken to repay the Loans. It appears that at the meeting in late October, RBS had agreed to give the pursuers twelve months to seek to transform the fortunes of the Portree Hotel. The continuing decline of its business, however, led to the pursuers' sequestration at the instance of RBS in June 2002.

[8] The pursuers contend that if Mr Scanlon had provided the correct figure, they would have repaid the Loans in about November 1998. In that event, they say that a very different chain of events would have ensued. The volume of trade at the Portree Hotel would have been sufficient to maintain the solvency of the business. As a result, they would have been able to obtain loans from other sources in order to finance their various commitments, including their business interests, the family home and their motor vessel. In consequence, they would not have been sequestrated.

[9] Apart from negligent misrepresentation, the pursuers also have a parallel case of breach of contract. They contend that it was an implied term of the Loan Agreements that RBS would provide them with an accurate figure for the Breakage Costs. With regard to quantification, the pursuers each claim £323,229.50, being one half of their alleged combined loss of £646,459. That total is arrived at from adding two separate figures: (a) what they require to repay to the trustee on their sequestrated estates (£341,459); and (b) their net worth on the date of sequestration if they had not been sequestrated (£305,000).

 

The Issues at Debate
[10]
On behalf of RBS, Mr Clark, Q.C. challenged the claim on three grounds. First, he submitted that the loss claimed was outside the scope of the bank's duty of care. Next he argued that the pursuers had failed to specify their loss. Thirdly, he said that there was no warrant to imply a term into the Loan agreements. Mr Anderson, Q.C., on behalf of the pursuers, maintained that the claim was sufficiently relevant and specific to justify a proof before answer.

 

The Scope of the Duty of Care and Causation

Defenders' Submissions
[11]
Mr Clark's primary submission related to the scope of the duty of care. He submitted that RBS only owed a duty to provide information to the pursuers. It did not owe any wider duty to advise them (South Australia Asset Management Corporation & Others v York Montague Ltd [1997] AC 191 'SAAMCO'). In consequence, its liability was a restricted one. It would only be liable for loss directly arising from the provision of incorrect information. He instanced the situation where the pursuers had actually paid the sum of £240,000 in 1998. In that case, RBS would be under a duty to repay the excess sums. He acknowledged, however, that such an action would be likely to be based upon repetition.

[12] Mr Clark focused on the narrow nature of RBS' conduct. It had only been asked to supply information connected with the early repayment of a loan. It could not reasonably expect that if the figure was wrong, the pursuers would be sequestrated. Mr Clark submitted that it was a necessary prerequisite for liability that RBS knew or ought to have known that by giving the wrong figure for Breakage Charges to the pursuers, it would lead to their inevitable insolvency. As they did not offer to prove such a case, the claim was irrelevant. He challenged the proposition that it was clearly in the pursuers' interest to repay the Loans. Put short, he said that was a matter for them to determine, not RBS.

 

Pursuers' Submissions
[13]
Mr Anderson accepted that RBS only owed a duty to provide information. He said, however, that there was little guidance regarding the identification of the loss that can be recovered in a particular case. He contended that it was sufficient if the loss suffered was of a type that was foreseeable, even if the degree of damage was unforeseeable (Simmons v British Steel plc 2004 SC (HL) 94; McGregor on Damages 17th ed. Paragraphs 6-079 and 6-083). Applying that approach in the present case, RBS did not require to foresee sequestration. It was enough that it could reasonably foresee that the pursuers would suffer adverse financial consequences, if the information was wrong through their negligence. He argued that it was plainly in the pursuers' interest to repay the Loans, a proposition he described as "axiomatic". That was to be inferred from the high rate of interest attached to the Loans. If they endured for the full term, the total cost to the pursuers would be about £1.5 million. That was significantly more than the rate of return on the deposit monies.

 

Discussion
[14]
When someone provides incorrect information, the first question is to consider the loss for which a person is answerable (SAAMCO at 211A-B, 211H per Lord Hoffman). The general principle is that liability is limited:

"... a person under a duty to take reasonable care to provide information on which someone else will decide upon a course of action is, if negligent, not generally regarded as responsible for all the consequences of that course of action. He is responsible only for the consequences of the information being wrong. A duty of care which imposes upon the informant responsibility for losses which would have occurred even if the information which he gave had been correct is not, in my view, fair and reasonable as between the parties. It is therefore inappropriate either as an implied term of a contract or as a tortuous duty arising from the relationship between them." (ibid at 214C-E)

[15] In SAAMCO, property had been negligently overvalued by surveyors. Lenders advanced significant sums on the security of those valuations. They would not have provided the loans, had they known the true figure. After the loans were made, the property market collapsed and the lenders sued the surveyors. The House of Lords held that the surveyors were not liable for the whole loss. They were only liable for the amount by which the valuations exceeded the true value of the property at the time. Accordingly, the surveyors were not under a duty to protect the lenders from falls in the property market.

[16] The pursuers' contention in the present case is that RBS should not only be liable for any immediate loss, but for all losses incurred by them from 1998 until 2002. If correct, that would in my view be a startling result. It would impose a greater duty on bankers providing information, than on surveyors providing valuations. I would be reluctant to arrive at such a result unless compelled to do so. In this instance, the circumstances do not drive me to that conclusion.

[17] The starting point is to consider the position of Mr Scanlon when he was asked for the information in 1998. He knew that the pursuers were interested in repaying the Loans and were seeking the figure for Breakage Charges. Apart from knowing the details of the loan agreements, that was largely the extent of his (and therefore RBS') knowledge. In my view, it was not plain to RBS that it was in the pursuers' best interests to repay the Loans early. There are many reasons why they might have chosen to continue with the Loans for the full term. They could have invested their free capital in the stock market, or in another business or project with the hope of a high rate of return. They could also have applied some funds to the Portree Hotel to increase its prospects, or elected to sell it as a going concern.

[18] In my view, RBS did not assume the risk of all the pursuer's financial losses when it provided the figure for Breakage Charges in 1998. In effect that would be to convert it into the role of an insurer. There were too many imponderables in the equation to hold that the sequestration directly stemmed from the alleged wrongful act. RBS could not predict the vicissitudes in the hotel trade. The matter is thrown into sharp relief by the events in autumn 1999. On the pursuers' approach RBS remains liable, even though they chose not to repay the Loans when a much lower figure was given.

[19] It is unclear what would have happened if the correct information had been provided. The pursuers might have still been sequestrated. It depended on a number of factors. Some of those factors were within their control, such as the financial decisions they took. Other factors were outside their control, such as the general market and the rate of return on deposits. In such circumstances, it would be inappropriate to hold RBS liable for any long term financial detriment to the pursuers. It is not necessary to determine the precise cut off point for liability, but it in my view it did not encompass the loss sought here. The matter can be approached from a number of angles. Couched in the language of duty of care, it can be said that the loss was not reasonably foreseeable. From the standpoint of causation, there was not "a sufficient causal connection with the subject matter of the duty" (SAAMCO p214B). Alternatively, it can be simply said that the loss was too remote.

[20] With regard to Simmons, I agree with senior counsel for the defenders that there is a clear distinction between economic loss and physical loss. Lord Rodger noted that the prior question of liability had to be established and added that although a defender is "not liable for a consequence of a kind which is not reasonably foreseeable, it does not follow that he is liable for all damage that was reasonably foreseeable" (paragraph 67).

[21] It follows from the above that I hold that the alleged loss falls outside the duty of care owed by RBS to the pursuers.

 

B. Loss

Defenders' Submissions
[22]
Mr Clark said that in this case, the specification of loss was of particular importance as it had an impact on the scope of the duty of care. He submitted that the pursuers had failed to explain the legal basis upon which they are required to pay any sum to their trustee (£341,000). Secondly, he said that there was a complete lack of specification in respect of the pursuers' alleged worth as at the date of their sequestration (£305,000). Thirdly, he said that in any event there was a fundamental contradiction between those two figures. One was based on the hypothesis that there had been a sequestration; the other that there had not.

[23] A forensic accountant's report prepared by Gray Corporate dated 23 October 2007 had been lodged by the pursuers and incorporated into their pleadings. Mr Clark described it as the centre-piece of the loss averments, but criticised it in a number of respects. He said that it contained a mass of material which had not been pled on record. It also made statements which contradicted parts of the pursuers' case. Crucially, it did not provide fair notice as to how the alleged loss was truly made up. For example, there was no material from which the pursuers' notional net worth as at the date of sequestration can be derived. The report gave an 'actual' figure of £176,000 and a 'notional' figure of £305,000 without further explanation. Accordingly, the report did not buttress the loss averments, nor make them more specific.

[24] Mr Clark said that the pursuers had failed to spell out in their pleadings what they took from the report. He referred to Barton v William Low & Company Ltd 1968 SLT (Notes) 27, where a party sought to incorporate a report which included passages that had nothing to do with the case. Lord Stott held that "an averment which seeks to incorporate material into a record on such terms is an irrelevant averment" on the basis that:

"It seems to me however that counsel for the third parties was well founded in objecting to be involved in what was described as a 'constructional exercise' in order to determine what it was that the pursuer sought to prove." (page 28).

[25] Reference was also made to The Royal Bank of Scotland plc v Holmes 1999 SLT 563, where Lord Macfadyen stated:

"There is in my view no need for an incorporated document to be agreed before it can be referred to at debate. Whether such incorporation is a satisfactory way of giving specification is another matter. That will depend on the nature of the case and the nature of the incorporated material. In some cases in which there is need as a matter of proper specification to give a large amount of detailed technical information the presentation of that information in the form of a documentary production referred to and incorporated in the pleadings brevitatis causa may be more satisfactory than an attempt to give the information in narrative form in the pleadings. On the other hand the wholesale incorporation into the pleadings of a lengthy document only parts of which are in any way relevant to the issues identified in the pleadings is in general unsatisfactory and may well be held not to give the specification required." (page 570F)

[26] Mr Anderson accepted that certain expressions of opinion and statements within the report did not form part of the pursuers' case. But he contended that there was sufficient specification to give fair notice to the defenders regarding the loss. He said that RBS was well able to construe the report, given its ready access to financial expertise. He relied on Appendix D of the report as being the easiest to follow in calculating the loss figure of £305,000. He said that he had sympathy for the defenders regarding the basis for some of the figures, but the correct course in the circumstances of this case was to allow a proof before answer, so that full inquiry could be made.

[27] In my view, the pursuers' pleadings do involve the "constructional exercise" that should be avoided. Further, although I acknowledge that some leeway should be given where detailed financial information is relied upon, there is a need to crystallise the basis upon which the claim is based. That is absent here. The report makes difficult reading and is impenetrable in parts. It is not possible to understand how the author arrives at the key figures. Senior counsel for the pursuers was unable to explain how the figures of £341,000 and £305,000 were derived. He also did not address the apparent tension between the two measures of loss. In those circumstances, I hold that the loss averments are irrelevant.

 

C. The Implied Term
[28]
The breach of contract case rests on the following averment:

"It was an implied term of the said loan agreements between the parties that the defenders, through their said representative, would provide the pursuers with an accurate figure for the breakage costs for repaying the said loans when the pursuers requested that information. In providing inaccurate breakage costs for repaying the said loans ... the defenders were accordingly in material breach of contract." (Condescendence 7).

[29] Counsel for both parties agreed that the relevant principles relating to implied terms were conveniently restated in two recent decisions of Lord Reed (Moyarget Developments Ltd v Rove Mathis & Others 2006 CSOH 145; and Credential Bath Street Ltd v Venture Investment Placement Ltd 2007 CSOH 208). It was agreed that a term could only be implied when it was required to give business efficacy to the contract. Accordingly, implication had to be by way of necessity, not reasonableness. A term could not be implied where there were a number of different terms to which the parties might have agreed. It was also acknowledged that it is difficult to imply a term when parties have entered into a lengthy and carefully drafted contract, but have omitted to make provision for the matter in issue.

[30] Counsel differed on how those principles should be applied to the facts of the present case. Mr Clark stressed that it was a carefully constructed document and argued that implication was unnecessary, because the agreement worked without the term proposed. By contrast, Mr Anderson submitted that the implied term was necessary to make the contract work. Without such a term, the pursuers would not be able to exercise their contractual right to repay the Loans early.

[31] On this branch of the case, I incline toward the position of the pursuers. Without the relevant information from RBS, they cannot exercise their right to make early repayment of the Loans. They cannot calculate the figure themselves, as it is evident from the terms of the loan agreement that only RBS is able to do that:

4.1 In terms of Clauses 2.3 and 6.3, any loss will reflect the cost to the Bank of unwinding funding transactions undertaken in connection with the Loan. Costs will be incurred when there has been a reduction in the market level of the appropriate interest rate underlying the Loan. The cost will be equivalent to the loss of interest income (including loss of margin) to the Bank as a result of re-deploying funds at a lower interest rate than that which prevailed when the Loan was booked.

[32] I differ from Mr Anderson, however, in relation to the actual content of the implied term. In my view, RBS is not required to warrant the accuracy of the figure for the Breakage Charges. I do not think that it would have accepted such a duty if the matter had been raised at the time the agreement was made. However, in order to make the contract workable, in my view it is under an obligation to take reasonable care when providing a figure. A similar duty was placed on the valuers in SAAMCO. Accordingly, if I had preferred the pursuers' arguments on the first two matters, I would only have allowed this branch of the case to proceed on the basis of a revision to the pleadings.

 

Conclusion
[33]
For the reasons outlined above, I shall sustain the defenders' first plea-in-law and dismiss the action.

 


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