HOUSE OF
LORDS |
SESSION
2005-06
[2006] UKHL 22
on appeal from: [2004] EWCA Civ 1627
|
OPINIONS
OF
THE LORDS OF APPEAL
for
judgment IN THE CAUSE |
Law Society
(Original Respondents and
Cross-appellants)
v.
Sephton & Co
(a firm) (Original Appellants and Cross-respondents) and another and
others (Original Appellants and
Cross-respondents) |
Appellate
Committee
Lord
Hoffmann
Lord Scott of
Foscote
Lord Rodger of
Earlsferry
Lord Walker of
Gestingthorpe
Lord
Mance
|
Counsel |
Original Appellants:
Michael
Pooles QC
Derek
Holwill
(Instructed by Barlow Lyde & Gilbert) |
Original Respondents:
Timothy
Dutton QC
Rosalind
Phelps
(Instructed by Wright Son & Pepper)
|
Hearing
date:
16 March
2006 |
on
WEDNESday
10 May 2006 |
|
|
|
HOUSE OF LORDS
OPINIONS OF THE LORDS OF APPEAL FOR JUDGMENT
IN THE CAUSE
Law Society (Original Respondents and Cross-appellants)
v. Sephton & Co (a firm) (Original Appellants and Cross-respondents)
and another and others (Original Appellants and Cross-respondents)
[2006] UKHL 22
LORD HOFFMANN
My Lords,
- Over a period of about six years
ending in March 1996, Mr Andrew Payne, a solicitor practising near
Solihull, misappropriated about £750,000 held in his client account. In
each of the years 1988-1995 he delivered to the Law Society an
accountant's report in which Mr Ian Mascord, a partner in the firm of
Sephton & Co of Solihull, certified that he had examined Mr Payne's
books and accounts and was satisfied that he had complied with the
Solicitors' Accounts Rules 1991. Mr Mascord was negligent, if not worse,
in signing these reports since he could not have made a proper
examination without discovering the misappropriations.
- The Law Society, which has broad
supervisory and disciplinary powers over the profession, relied upon the
reports by refraining from making the investigation it would have made
if the reports had not been delivered or had indicated that something
was amiss. Mr Payne had staved off discovery by taking money from one
client to pay off another ("teeming and lading") but in April 1996 a
client complained to the Law Society of delay in payment and on 17 May
1996 the Society's investigating accountant discovered the deficiency.
On 20 May 1996 the Society exercised its statutory powers of
intervention; Mr Payne was afterwards struck off the roll of solicitors
and went to prison.
- By section 36 of the Solicitors
Act 1974 the Society is required to maintain and administer a
Compensation Fund for the purpose of making grants for, among other
things, the relief of loss caused by dishonesty on the part of a
solicitor. The Society has power to make rules about the Fund and the
Solicitors' Compensation Fund Rules 1995 contain "guidelines" which
explain the circumstances in which grants will ordinarily be made.
General principle (a) says that the "basic object of the Fund is to
replace 'client's money' misappropriated by a solicitor'. General
principle (b) emphasises that grants are wholly at the discretion of the
Council and that "no person has a right to a grant enforceable at law"
but that the intention of the Council is to "seek to administer the Fund
in an even-handed and consistent manner". Claims must be made in a form
prescribed by the Society (Rule 5) and delivered to the Society within
six months after the loss has come to the knowledge of the applicant
(Rule 6).
- The first claim by a former client
of Mr Payne was made on 8 July 1996 and over the following months more
came in. The claims fell squarely within the object of the Fund and were
duly paid. The first payment was made in October 1996 and by 8 January
2003 the Fund had paid a total of £1,245,764.11 (including interest) in
respect of claims arising out of Mr Payne's misappropriations.
- On 8 October 1996 the Society
wrote to Sephton & Co saying that they proposed to hold the firm
liable for payments which had to be made out of the Fund and which they
said were attributable to the negligent reports signed by Mr Mascord.
Matters proceeded slowly, not least because the whole question of
whether an accountant who gives such a report owes a duty of care to the
Law Society was about to be litigated in other proceedings. The Society
and Sephton & Co's insurers agreed to await the outcome. In 1999 Sir
Richard Scott V-C ruled in favour of the Law Society and on 29 June 2000
an appeal to the Court of Appeal was dismissed: see Law Society v
KPMG Peat Marwick [2000] 1 WLR 1921.
- Negotiations continued but the
claim form was not issued until 16 May 2002. On 20 May 2002 Sephton
& Co's solicitors wrote to say that they had been advised that that
the limitation period had expired "long ago". The defence filed on 24
June 2002 pleaded that the claims were statute-barred. The Law Society
denied that the limitation period had expired and pleaded in the
alternative that Sephton & Co were estopped from relying upon the
Limitation Act by representations made in the course of correspondence.
Both questions were ordered to be tried as preliminary issues.
- The normal period of limitation
prescribed by section 2 of the Limitation Act 1980 for an action founded
on tort is six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued.
Since a cause of action may accrue without the knowledge of the injured
party (Cartledge v Jopling [1963] AC 758) the six year period may
expire before he is able to bring proceedings. In actions for negligence
in which the cause of action accrues before the potential claimant knows
the relevant facts, section 14A therefore prescribes an additional
period of three years from the date on which he acquires such knowledge.
But this provision is of no use to the Law Society because, if the cause
of action accrued before the commencement of the six year period, ie
before 16 May 1996, the Society knew all the relevant facts very shortly
thereafter; certainly well before the commencement of the three year
period on 16 May 1999. The Society can therefore bring the proceedings
only if the cause of action accrued after 16 May 1996.
- The preliminary issues were tried
by Mr Michael Briggs QC, sitting as an additional judge of the Chancery
Division [2004] EWHC 544 (Ch). He ruled against the Society on both
points, holding that the cause of action had accrued before 16 May 1996
and that Sephton & Co were not estopped from relying upon a
limitation defence. The Court of Appeal agreed with the judge on the
second point but, by a majority (Carnwath and Maurice Kay LJJ, Neuberger
LJ dissenting) reversed his decision on the first point [2004] EWCA Civ 1627; [2005] QB 1013. Sephton & Co appeal to your
Lordships' House on the limitation issue and the Law Society
cross-appeal on the estoppel issue.
- Damage is an essential element in
a cause of action for negligence. Mr Mascord was negligent when he
signed his reports at various dates between 1988 and 1995 but the Law
Society had no cause of action until it suffered damage in consequence
of his negligence. So the critical question is when the damage happened.
Sephton & Co say that the Society suffered damage whenever Mr Payne
misappropriated a client's money after a negligent report had been
delivered. The misappropriation gave the client a right to make a claim
on the Fund and liability to such a claim was damage. The Law Society
says that it suffered damage only when a claim was made. The
misappropriation might have been repaid, either out of Mr Payne's own
money or, more likely, by some teeming and lading. The client might not
have made a claim. All that could be said was that, once there had been
a misappropriation, it was likely that there would be a claim. But the
Law Society could not have commenced proceedings on the basis that
claims were likely.
- There is, I am afraid, a good
deal of recent authority on the point, which was considered at some
length by Neuberger LJ in his thoughtful dissenting judgment and,
slightly more summarily, by the judge and the majority in the Court of
Appeal. As far back as Bell v Peter Browne & Co [1990] 2 QB
495, 502B, Nicholls LJ said that "the question of damage and the
limitation period in negligence claims has been a troublesome one for
some years" and later cases show that the question has not ceased to
trouble. An examination of a number of cases, including a recent
decision of your Lordships' House, is unavoidable.
- It is not necessary to go back
further than the decision of the Court of Appeal in Forster v Outred
& Co [1982] 1 WLR 86. On 8 February 1973 Mrs Forster signed a
mortgage by which she charged her farm to secure money which her son was
borrowing to buy an hotel. The business was a failure and on 21 January
1975 Mrs Forster was called upon to pay about £70,000, which she paid on
29 August 1975. In March 1980 she issued a writ against the solicitors
who had advised her in connection with the mortgage, alleging negligence
in not explaining the transaction. The question was whether the action
was statute barred and that depended upon whether she suffered damage
when she executed the deed (more than six years before the writ) or when
she was called upon to pay.
- Stephenson LJ recorded (at p 93)
the submission of Mr Stuart-Smith QC, for the defendants:
"When she signed the mortgage deed she suffered actual damage. By
entering into a burdensome bond or contract or mortgage she sustained
immediate economic loss; her valuable freehold became encumbered with
a charge and its value to her was diminished because she had merely
the equity of redemption, varying in value at the whim of her son's
creditors."
- Later (at p 94), he recorded Mr
Stuart-Smith's submission on the meaning of the "actual damage" needed
to complete a cause of action in negligence:
"Any detriment, liability or loss capable of assessment in money
terms and it includes liabilities which may arise on a contingency,
particularly a contingency over which the plaintiff has no control;
things like loss of earning capacity, loss of a chance or bargain,
loss of profit, losses incurred from onerous provisions or covenants
in leases."
- Stephenson LJ said (at p 98)
that he accepted Mr Stuart-Smith's statement of the law. The ambiguity
in these passages (in an unreserved judgment in an interlocutory appeal)
arises from the inclusion of the words "it includes liabilities which
may arise on a contingency" in the second quotation. As appears from the
first passage, the thrust of Mr Stuart-Smith's argument was that the
mortgage, although the liability which it secured was contingent, had
the immediate effect of depressing the value of Mrs Forster's farm. But
the reference to contingent liabilities in the second passage could give
the impression that merely incurring a possible future liability (for
example, by giving a guarantee or indemnity unsecured upon any property)
counted as immediate damage.
- Dunn LJ also appears to have
accepted the argument in the first quotation from Mr Stuart-Smith's
argument. He said, at p 100:
"As soon as she executed the mortgage the plaintiff not only
became liable under its express terms but also - and more importantly
- the value of the equity of redemption of her property was reduced.
Before she executed the mortgage deed she owned the property free from
incumbrances; thereafter she became the owner of a property subject to
a mortgage. That, in my view, was a quantifiable loss and as from that
date her cause of action against her solicitor was complete."
- The broader interpretation of
Forster v Outred & Co was unanimously rejected by the High
Court of Australia in Wardley Australia Ltd v State of Western
Australia (1992) 175 CLR 514. The principal judgment of Mason CJ and
Dawson, Gaudron and McHugh JJ) is a masterly exposition of the law which
deserves careful study. The State of Western Australia sued under a
statute creating liability for misleading conduct, claiming that on 26
October 1987 it had been induced by the defendant's misrepresentation to
indemnify a bank against loss on a loan to a company in difficulties.
The indemnity was called in November 1988 and the State paid $22.5m in
December 1989. Proceedings were commenced on 24 October 1990, within the
three year limitation period provided by the statute, but the State
applied on 14 January 1991 to amend to plead an additional
misrepresentation on 25 October 1987. This was more than 3 years after
the execution of the indemnity but less than three years after it had
been called and paid. The High Court decided that the State suffered no
damage while its obligation under the guarantee remained contingent.
Damage occurred only when it was called.
- The High Court said, at pp 529,
531, 532, that Forster v Outred & Co was explicable:
"by reference to the immediate effect of the execution of the
mortgage on the value of the plaintiff's equity of redemption …. It
has been contended that the principle underlying the English decisions
extends to the point that a plaintiff sustains loss on entry into an
agreement notwithstanding that the loss to which the plaintiff is
subjected by the agreement is a loss upon a contingency. For our part,
we doubt that the decisions travel so far. Rather, it seems to us, the
decisions in cases which involve contingent loss were decisions which
turned on the plaintiff sustaining measurable loss at an earlier time,
quite apart from the contingent loss which threatened at a later
date…. If…the English decisions properly understood support the
proposition that where, as a result of the defendant's negligent
representation, the plaintiff enters into a contract which exposes him
or her to a contingent loss or liability, the plaintiff first suffers
loss or damage on entry into the contract, we do not agree with them.
In our opinion, in such a case, the plaintiff sustains no actual
damage until the contingency is fulfilled and the loss becomes actual;
until that happens the loss is prospective and may never be incurred."
- I say at once that I am in
complete agreement with this analysis, which provides the answer to this
appeal. By virtue of the terms of the Solicitors' Compensation Fund
Rules 1995, Mr Payne's misappropriations gave rise to the possibility of
a liability to pay a grant out of the Fund, contingent upon the
misappropriation not being otherwise made good and a claim in proper
form being made. Such a liability would be enforceable only in public
law, by judicial review, but would still in my opinion count as damage.
But until a claim was actually made, no loss or damage was sustained by
the Fund. I must however consider certain other authorities and contrary
arguments.
- My second quotation from the
judgment of Stephenson LJ in Forster v Outred & Co [1982] 1
WLR 86, 94 was approved by this House in Nykredit Mortgage Bank plc v
Edward Erdman Group Ltd (No 2) [1997] 1 WLR 1627, 1630, but the House did nothing to resolve the ambiguity which
I have identified. There was no need to do so because the context was
altogether different. In Nykredit the surveyor's negligent
valuation had led to the plaintiff obtaining what turned out to be
inadequate security for his loan. There was no question of a contingent
liability; the issue was whether a cause of action arose immediately or
when the amount he was owed exceeded the value of his rights under the
transaction (borrower's covenant plus security). The House decided that
it was the latter. This was entirely in accordance with the principles
discussed in the Wardley case, where, in a passage to which Lord
Nicholls of Birkenhead referred, at p 1634, Brennan J said, at 175 CLR
514, 536:
"A plaintiff may suffer economic loss or damage in a number of
ways: by payment of money, by transfer of property, by diminution in
the value of an asset or by the incurring of a liability. Whether loss
or damage is actually suffered when any of these events occurs depends
on the value of the benefit, if any, acquired by the plaintiff by
paying the money, transferring the property, having the value of the
asset diminished or incurring the liability. If the plaintiff acquires
no benefit, the loss or damage is suffered when the event occurs. At
that time, the plaintiff's net worth is reduced. And that is so even
if the quantification of that loss or damage is not then
ascertainable. But if a benefit is acquired by the plaintiff, it may
not be possible to ascertain whether loss or damage has been suffered
at the time when the burden is borne - that is, at the time of the
payment, the transfer, the diminution in value of the asset or the
incurring of the liability. A transaction in which there are benefits
and burdens results in loss or damage only if an adverse balance is
struck."
- Nykredit therefore
decides that in a transaction in which there are benefits (covenant for
repayment and security) as well as burdens (payment of the loan) and the
measure of damages is the extent to which the lender is worse off than
he would have been if he had not entered into the transaction, the
lender suffers loss and damage only when it is possible to say that he
is on balance worse off. It does not discuss the question of a purely
contingent liability.
- Next, there are a number of
cases in the Court of Appeal which involve transactions, with both
benefits and burdens, into which the plaintiff entered as a result of
the negligence or breach of contract of the defendant. None of these
cases concerned purely contingent obligations. It is only necessary to
observe that in such bilateral transactions the answer to the question
of whether damage has been suffered may be different according to
whether the liability is for the consequences of the defendant not
performing his duty or (as is usual in claims for misrepresentation) the
consequences, or some of the consequences, of the plaintiff entering
into the transaction. If the liability is for the difference between
what the plaintiff got and what he would have got if the defendant had
done what he was supposed to have done, it may be relatively easy, as
Bingham LJ pointed out in D W Moore & Co Ltd v Ferrier [1988]
1 WLR 267, to infer that the plaintiff has suffered some immediate
damage, simply because he did not get what he should have got. Thus in
Knapp v Ecclesiastical Insurance Group plc [1998] PNLR 172, where
the plaintiff paid a premium for a voidable fire insurance policy
because his insurance broker had failed to disclose material facts, the
Court of Appeal held that he had suffered immediate damage because he
"did not get what he should have got", namely a policy binding on the
insurers. On the other hand, if the damage is (as it was in
Nykredit [1997] 1 WLR 1627 and First National Commercial Bank plc v Humberts [1995]
2 All ER 673) the difference between the defendant's position after
entering into the transaction and what it would have been if he had not
entered into the transaction, the answer may be more difficult. Despite
the breach of duty, the transaction may on balance have originally been
advantageous to the plaintiff and some evidence may be necessary to show
when he was actually in a worse position. The judgment of Mason CJ and
his colleagues in Wardley drew attention to this distinction at
175 CLR 514, 530-531:
"Another element in some of the English decisions…is the
conclusion that, because the subject matter of the agreement lacked
the qualities which it had been represented as having, that subject
matter was therefore less valuable than it would have been if the
representations had been true. That conclusion is acceptable in cases
in which the contract measure of damages is appropriate but it is not
acceptable here where the contract measure of damages does not apply.
The application of that measure of damages [sc the difference between
the value of what the plaintiff got and what he would have got if the
defendant had performed his duty] may, in some situations, enable a
court to conclude more readily that the plaintiff first suffers loss
or damage on entry into an agreement."
- Thus cases like Bell v Peter
Browne & Co [1990] 2 QB 495 and Knapp v Ecclesiastical
Insurance Group plc [1998] PNLR 172 are readily explicable as cases
in which the damage was the difference between the plaintiff's position
as it was and as it would have been if the defendant had performed his
duty and in which it was possible to infer that the plaintiff's failure
to get what he should have got from a bilateral transaction was
quantifiable damage, even though further damage which might result from
the flaw in the transaction was still contingent. The plaintiff had paid
money, transferred property, incurred liabilities or suffered diminution
in the value of an asset and in return obtained less than he should have
got. But these authorities have no relevance to a case in which a purely
contingent obligation has been incurred.
- The only case to which we were
referred which cannot in my opinion be explained in this way is
Gordon v JB Wheatley & Co [2000] Lloyd's Rep PN 605, in which
the plaintiff sued his solicitors for negligence in wrongly advising him
that a collective mortgage scheme did not require authorisation under
the Financial Services Act 1986. As a result, he was obliged by the
Securities and Investment Board to indemnify investors in the scheme
against losses and this eventually cost him about £676,000. He began his
action more than six years after the advice had been given but less than
six years after the SIB required him to indemnify the investors. The
Court of Appeal held that he had suffered loss when he continued to take
investments after receiving the advice. The claim was statute-barred.
- If, as a result of entering into
the investment transactions, the plaintiff had obtained rights against
the investors which were worth less than he should have got, the case
would have been similar to Bell v Peter Browne & Co [1990] 2
QB 495 and Knapp v Ecclesiastical Insurance Group plc [1998] PNLR 172, which the Court of Appeal said it was following. But, as Carnwath
LJ pointed out in his judgment in this case ([2005] QB 1013, 1054) the
risk of action by the SIB was not a liability arising directly from the
investment transaction:
"The enforcement powers of the SIB were quite independent of the
rights and liabilities arising under the scheme. The link was at the
most indirect, in that the investment in the mortgage scheme provided
simply the occasion for the SIB to act."
- I agree, and am inclined to
think that Gordon v JB Wheatley & Co [2000] Lloyd's Rep PN 605 was wrongly decided. But otherwise, as Buxton LJ observed in
Knapp's case ([1998] PNLR 172, 192) there seems to be no
authority inconsistent with the opinion of the High Court of Australia
in Wardley that incurring a contingent liability is not, as such,
actionable damage.
- I turn to the wider policy
considerations discussed by Neuberger LJ in his dissenting judgment. In
Wardley, the High Court said, at 175 CLR 514, 527) that it would
be unjust to compel a plaintiff to institute proceedings before the
existence of the loss is ascertained or ascertainable:
"In many instances the disadvantageous character or effect of the
agreement cannot be ascertained until some future date when its impact
upon events as they unfold becomes known or apparent and, by then, the
relevant limitation period may have expired….Moreover, it would
increase the possibility that the courts would be forced to estimate
damages on the basis of likelihood or probability instead of assessing
damages by reference to established events."
- In Knapp's case, [1998]
PNLR at 172, 178, Hobhouse LJ said that Wardley showed that
Australia had adopted a different solution to the potential injustice
caused by a strict application of the limitation period. The judges had
devised a stricter test for deciding when the cause of action accrued,
whereas in England Parliament had introduced the alternative three year
limitation period in section 14A. In Nykredit at [1997] 1 WLR 1627, 1633, Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead said that:
"within the bounds of sense and reasonableness the policy of the
law should be to advance, rather than retard, the accrual of a cause
of action."
- I respectfully think that the
reasons of policy advanced by the High Court in Wardley 175 CLR
514 are somewhat overstated. It is often the case that a plaintiff, who
has plainly suffered some damage, is obliged to commence proceedings
before the full effects of his injury can be known. This frequently
happens in actions for personal injury. On the other hand, I do not
agree with Hobhouse LJ that Wardley and section 14A of the 1980
Act are different solutions to the same problem. They are solutions to
different problems. Allowing a plaintiff three years from the date on
which he knows that a cause of action has arisen does not help if a mere
contingent liability is treated as damage and the plaintiff, at the end
of the three years, still does not know whether the contingency will
eventuate or not. On the other hand, Wardley is no answer to a
case like Cartledge v E Jopling & Sons Ltd [1963] AC
758, in which the plaintiff had on any view suffered damage but did not
know it.
- It also seems to me irrelevant
that a prudent accountant, drawing up the accounts of the Compensation
Fund to give a true and fair view of its assets and liabilities, would
have included provision for contingent liabilities. As Lord Radcliffe
pointed out in Southern Railway of Peru Ltd v Owen [1957] AC 334,
357, the principles upon which such provisions are made does not depend
upon "any exact analysis of the legal form of the relevant obligation"
but upon estimates of what in practice is likely to happen. A cause of
action, however, connotes a legal obligation and its existence must be
determined by rules of law.
- In my opinion, therefore, the
question must be decided on principle. A contingent liability is not as
such damage until the contingency occurs. The existence of a contingent
liability may depress the value of other property, as in Forster v
Outred & Co [1982] 1 WLR 86, or it may mean that a party to a
bilateral transaction has received less than he should have done, or is
worse off than if he had not entered into the transaction (according to
which is the appropriate measure of damages in the circumstances). But,
standing alone as in this case, the contingency is not damage.
- The majority of the Court of
Appeal appear to have decided the case on the basis that the Law Society
did not enter into any transaction giving rise to the contingent
liability. It did nothing and the contingent liability was created by
the misappropriations and the previous existence of the Compensation
Fund and the rules which governed its administration. No doubt in most
cases in which a party incurs a contingent liability as a result of
entering into a transaction, that liability will result in damage for
the reasons already discussed in relation to bilateral transactions. But
I would prefer to put my decision on the simple basis that the
possibility of an obligation to pay money in the future is not in itself
damage.
- It follows that in my opinion
the appeal should be dismissed and that it is not necessary to consider
the cross-appeal on estoppel.
LORD SCOTT OF FOSCOTE
My Lords,
- I have had the advantage of
reading in draft the opinions prepared by my noble and learned friends
Lord Hoffmann, Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe and Lord Mance and find
myself in complete accord with their analysis of the problem raised by
this appeal, their comments on the relevant authorities and their
conclusions. There is very little that I can usefully add. I do,
however, want to add my agreement to that of Lord Hoffmann with the
analysis of and comments about English law expressed by Mason CJ in
Wardley Australia Ltd v State of Western Australia (1992) 175 CLR
514 (see paras 17 and 18 of Lord Hoffmann's opinion). I agree with Lord
Hoffmann that that analysis provides the answer to this appeal.
- I agree, also, with Lord Mance's
conclusions that a cause of action in tort did not accrue in the Law
Society's favour against Sephtons until the Law Society first received a
claim on the Compensation Fund from a Payne & Co client whose money
had been misappropriated.
- I agree with my noble and
learned friends that for the reasons they have given this appeal should
be dismissed.
LORD RODGER OF EARLSFERRY
My Lords,
- I have had the advantage of
considering the speeches of my noble and learned friends, Lord Hoffmann,
Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe and Lord Mance, in draft. I agree with them
and, for the reasons which they give, I too would dismiss the appeal.
LORD WALKER OF GESTINGTHORPE
My Lords,
- A claimant wishing to sue for
negligence must be able to identify the time at which he suffers damage.
Until he has suffered damage he cannot sue for damages (although he may
possibly be able to apply for an injunction to prevent damage
occurring). If on the other hand he waits too long after he has suffered
damage, he may find that his claim is statute-barred. Sometimes a
claimant suffers damage without being aware of it, because the damage
takes the form of a latent disease, or a latent defect in a building or
structure, or defective professional services whose adverse consequences
take some time to become apparent. Where damage has undoubtedly occurred
but the claimant is unaware of some or all of the material facts, his
difficulties are alleviated (although not always entirely removed) by
sections 11, 14 and 14A of the Limitation Act 1980 (the latter section,
which was added by the Latent Damage Act 1986, has recently been
considered by this House in Haward v Fawcetts (a firm) [2006] UKHL 9; [2006] 1 WLR 682).
- The facts of this appeal include
what can be called a period of latency. In annual accountant's reports
to the Law Society made between 5 January 1989 and 8 November 1995 Mr
Mascord of Sephton & Co. ("Sephton") negligently certified that the
financial affairs of his client solicitor, Mr Payne (and in particular,
his clients' accounts and trust accounts) were in order. The information
in the certificates was untrue, but the Law Society did not know it was
untrue, and in reliance on the certificates it did not until May 1996
(when alerted by complaints from some of Mr Payne's clients) take action
which it would otherwise have taken much sooner—that is to send in an
investigating accountant and, on receiving his report of a massive
deficiency, to intervene in Mr Payne's practice as a sole practitioner.
The investigating accountant was sent in on 14 May 1996. He reported
three days later and the intervention occurred on 20 May 1996.
- Claims on the Law Society's
compensation fund (established under section 36 of the Solicitors Act
1974 and regulated by the Solicitors' Compensation Rules 1995) began to
come in soon afterwards, and by 8 January 2003 the Law Society as
trustee of the compensation fund had paid out over £1,245,000 in meeting
claims by Mr Payne's clients. Yet for various reasons (including the
case of Law Society v KPMG Peat Marwick, decided by the
Vice-Chancellor in October 1999, [2000] 1 All ER 515, and by the Court
of Appeal in June 2000, [2000] 1 WLR 1921) the Law Society's claim form
against Sephton was not issued until 16 May 2002 (that is six years less
four days from the intervention in Mr Payne's practice). The period of
latency (giving a further three years from the claimant's date of
knowledge) could not assist the Law Society in contending that the claim
was not statute-barred. It could resist Sephton's limitation defence
only by establishing either (i) that by 16 May 1996 it had not yet
suffered any damage as a result of Sephton's negligence; or (ii) that
Sephton was estopped from relying on the limitation defence. Those are
the issues in Sephton's appeal and the Law Society's cross appeal
respectively. Mr Michael Briggs QC (sitting as a deputy judge of the
High Court, Chancery Division) decided the first issue in favour of
Sephton. The Court of Appeal by a majority (Carnwath and Maurice Kay
LJJ, Neuberger LJ dissenting) allowed the Law Society's appeal on the
first issue. On the second issue both lower courts rejected the Law
Society's argument based on estoppel.
- On the first issue (the only
issue on which the House found it necessary to hear argument) the
opposing contentions can be simply stated. The Law Society contends that
even though it knew (from the moment when its investigating accountant
reported on the true state of the solicitor's accounts) that it was
facing the prospect (or risk) of having to pay heavy compensation in due
course, it did not suffer actual damage in the eyes of the law until it
resolved to make its first payment out of the compensation fund to one
of the solicitor's former clients. In putting forward this contention
the Law Society relies partly on its public law function in
administering the compensation fund, but it also puts its case on
broader grounds. Against that Sephton contend that the Law Society was
worse off from the time of each new misappropriation following the issue
of successive untrue certificates (and knew it was worse off from the
moment of the investigating accountant's report as to the true facts).
The need to wait for claims on the compensation fund to be made and
settled, in order to quantify the damage, did not mean that damage had
not already been suffered.
- This last point is plainly
right, in the limited sense that a claimant does not have to wait for
final quantification of his damage. It is a commonplace of negligence
actions of all sorts that a cause of action may arise long before it is
possible to quantify precisely the damages eventually recoverable. But
there are other situations in which the correct legal analysis is that,
however great may be the prospect (or risk) of economic loss, actionable
damage has not yet occurred (just as there are situations in which there
is grave and obvious risk of personal injury or damage to property, but
actionable damage has not yet occurred).
- Mr Pooles QC (for Sephton)
pointed to the decision of this House in Nykredit Mortgage Bank Plc v
Edward Erdman Group Ltd (No 2) [1997] 1 WLR 1627 as authority for the general inclination of the law to treat a
cause of action as arising sooner rather than later. Lord Nicholls of
Birkenhead said, at p 1633,
"Further, within the bounds of sense and reasonableness the policy
of the law should be to advance, rather than retard, the accrual of a
cause of action."
The House also approved (see p 1630) the
formulation by Mr (Murray) Stuart-Smith QC previously approved by the
Court of Appeal in Forster v Outred & Co [1982] 1 WLR 86, 94,
"What is meant by actual damage? Mr Stuart-Smith says that it is
any detriment, liability or loss capable of assessment in money terms
and it includes liabilities which may arise on a contingency,
particularly a contingency over which the plaintiff has no control;
things like loss of earning capacity, loss of a chance or bargain,
loss of profit, losses incurred from onerous provisions or covenants
in leases. They are all illustrations of a kind of loss which is meant
by 'actual' damage."
In this passage Sephton naturally places
emphasis on the words "any detriment." The Law Society emphasises
"capable of assessment in money terms." In any event the passage,
although approved by high authority, cannot be construed as if it were a
statute.
- In Nykredit the
expression "worse off" was used by Lord Nicholls (in discussing the
authorities mentioned at p1634E and H) and by my noble and learned
friend Lord Hoffmann (at pp1638D and 1639D: in the last reference the
phrase is "financially worse off"). This latter formulation seems to me
to be preferable, if I may respectfully say so, since the colloquial
phrase "worse off" (like "detriment") is imprecise. A bank or building
society which (in reliance on a negligent valuation) lends £1m on a
property said to be worth £1.5m but actually worth £1.25m is in a sense
worse off (or has suffered a detriment) in that it has a margin of
security of only one-fifth of the sum secured, rather than one-third.
But so long as the borrower's covenant is good, it has suffered no loss.
That (together with the identification of the relevant loss: see Lord
Nicholls at p 1630F and Lord Hoffmann at p 1638C-H) is the whole point
of Nykredit: see Lord Nicholls at pp1631B-F and 1632C-E and Lord
Hoffmann at p1639B-D. The Court of Appeal had reached a similar result
in First National Commercial Bank Plc v Humberts (a firm) [1995]
2 All ER 673, a decision referred to with approval by the House in
Nykredit.
- In First National Commercial
Bank, Saville LJ made some observations, at p 679, which I find
helpful:
"At the hearing and in the judgment much reliance was placed on
the cases where the claimant entered into a transaction which through
a breach of duty owed to the claimant provided the claimant with less
rights than should have been secured, or imposed liabilities or
obligations on the claimant which should not have been imposed.
Examples of these cases are: Forster v Outred & Co (a firm)
[1982] 1 WLR 86, Iron Trade Mutual Insurance Co Ltd v J K Buckenham
Ltd [1990] 1 All ER 808 and Bell v Peter Browne & Co (a
firm) [1990] 2 QB 495. In all those cases, however, the court was
able to conclude that the transaction then and there caused the
claimant loss, on the basis that if the injured party had been put in
the position he would have occupied but for the breach of duty, the
transaction in question would have provided greater rights, or imposed
lesser liabilities or obligations than was the case; and that the
difference between these two states of affairs could be quantified in
money terms at the date of the transaction."
- The three cases cited by Saville
LJ in this passage were all cases where the client had through the
negligence of his professional adviser ended up with a package of rights
less valuable than he was entitled to expect—damaged or defective goods,
to pursue the metaphor, rather than the undamaged and serviceable goods
which he should have got. In Forster it was a mortgage (securing
the existing and future liabilities of the claimant's son, who later
went bankrupt) burdening the claimant's previously unencumbered freehold
property. In Iron Trade Mutual, it was a reinsurance policy which
was voidable for misrepresentation or non-disclosure. In Bell it
was a beneficial interest in one-sixth of the proceeds of sale of a
former matrimonial home which was defective as a result of what Nicholls
LJ, at p 502, called "failure (a)" and "failure (b)":
"(a) The solicitors' failure to see that the parties' agreement
was recorded formally in a suitable declaration of trust or other
instrument and (b) their failure to protect the plaintiff's interest
in the house or the proceeds of sale by lodging a caution. As to
failure (a), clearly the damage, such as it may have been, was
sustained when the transfer was executed and handed over. At that
point the plaintiff parted with title to the house, and became subject
to the practical inconveniences which might flow from his not having
his wife's signature on a formal document."
Nicholls LJ went on to hold that failure (b)
also caused immediate loss even though the defect (if recognised, which
was unlikely once the solicitor had closed the file) could have been
avoided, at some expense, at any time while the house remained unsold. A
similar approach was taken (to a voidable fire insurance policy) by the
Court of Appeal in Knapp v Ecclesiastical Insurance Group Plc
[1998] PNLR 172.
- It is unnecessary to multiply
examples of "transaction" cases but D W Moore & Co Ltd v
Ferrier [1988] 1 WLR 267 calls for mention, since it has been cited
in many later cases. A solicitor was instructed to prepare an agreement
providing for the introduction of a new working director into an
insurance business carried on by a company. His instructions called for
the new director to enter into a restrictive covenant which would take
effect on his leaving the business. Through careless drafting the
covenant was ineffective. The agreement (entered into in 1971 and
renewed with the same defect in 1975) continued until 1980 when, on the
director's departure from the business, the covenant was found to be
defective. The company issued a writ against the solicitors in 1985. The
Court of Appeal upheld the judge's decision that the claim was
statute-barred. Neill LJ said, at p 278,
"The plaintiffs suffered damage 'because [they] did not get what
[they] should have got.' The plaintiffs' rights under the two
agreements were demonstrably less valuable than they would have been
had adequate restrictive covenants been included."
Similarly, Bingham LJ said, at p 279:
"On the plaintiffs' case, which for purposes of this issue may be
assumed to be wholly correct, the covenants against competition were
intended, and said by the defendants, to be effective but were in
truth wholly ineffective. It seems to me clear beyond argument that
from the moment of executing each agreement the plaintiffs suffered
damage because instead of receiving a potentially valuable chose in
action they received one that was valueless."
- A variation on the "transaction"
cases, but one that to my mind shows essentially the same approach, is
when a client instructs a solicitor to bring an action for damages. His
claim is a chose in action and it is in effect entrusted to the
solicitor to bring it to maturity. The solicitor is liable for making
his client's chose in action valueless if he carelessly allows it to
become statute-barred (or "doomed to failure" because a striking-out
application would be bound to succeed: see Clarke LJ in Hatton v
Chafes (a firm) [2003] EWCA Civ 341, 13 March 2003, para 23; also Sir Anthony Evans at para 82).
- In all these cases the claimant
has as a result of professional negligence suffered a diminution
(sometimes immediately quantifiable, often not yet quantifiable) in the
value of an existing asset of his, or has been disappointed (as against
what he was entitled to expect) in an asset which he acquires, whether
it is a house, a business arrangement, an insurance policy, or a claim
for damages. Your Lordships have not, I think, been shown any case in
which the imposition on a claimant of a purely personal and wholly
contingent liability, unsecured by a charge on any of the claimant's
assets, has been treated as actual loss. That would have been the
position if the claimant in Forster [1982] 1 WLR 86 had given a
personal covenant guaranteeing her son's debts (which she seems not to
have done—she paid them simply to prevent enforcement of the security on
her farm) and if she had not given any security over any of her own
assets.
- I do not find it necessary to
enter into a detailed discussion of the decision of the High Court of
Australia in Wardley Australia Ltd v State of Western Australia
(1992) 175 CLR 514. But I respectfully agree with the comment in the
judgment of the plurality (Mason CJ, Dawson, Gaudron and McHugh JJ, at p
531),
"It has been contended that the principle underlying the English
decisions extends to the point that a plaintiff sustains loss on entry
into an agreement notwithstanding that the loss to which the plaintiff
is subjected by the agreement is a loss upon a contingency. For our
part, we doubt that the decisions travel so far. Rather, it seems to
us, the decisions in cases which involve contingent loss were
decisions which turned on the plaintiff sustaining measurable loss at
an earlier time, quite apart from the contingent loss which threatened
at a later date."
The footnote to the last sentence refers to
Forster and Moore.
- Of all the cases cited to the
House the only one that causes me any difficulty is the decision of the
Court of Appeal in Gordon v J B Wheatley (a firm) [2000] Lloyd's Rep PN 605. In that case the claimant operated a private mortgage scheme
through a number of companies which he controlled. The claimant's case
was that his solicitors failed to advise him properly about the
requirements of the Financial Services Act 1986. The Securities and
Investments Board began an investigation into his companies in May 1992
and alleged that the scheme was an unauthorised (and so unlawful)
collective investment scheme. In September 1992 the claimant was advised
(by other solicitors) to sign an indemnity making himself personally
liable for any losses suffered by investors under the scheme, and in due
course he became liable for over £676,000. Kennedy LJ (with whom Kay LJ
agreed) reviewed the authorities at some length, but the actual grounds
of the decision, at p 612, are rather briefly stated. Kennedy LJ
rejected the submission of counsel for the claimant that he was, when
the various investments were made, "only potentially worse off"; Kennedy
LJ said that after the investments were made the claimant was exposed to
a risk of an order under section 6(2) of the Financial Services Act
1968, and
"that was a liability, albeit a contingent liability, a fetter on
his assets, from which on his case he would have been protected if the
first defendant had exercised proper care."
He then went on to observe,
"If the first defendant was negligent in the way that is alleged
(ie by failing to advise the claimant how to set up his scheme so that
it was not capable of being considered a collective investment scheme,
or failing to advise him to seek authorisation pursuant to the 1986
Act) then, for the reasons I have given when reviewing the
authorities, I must conclude that the claimant did sustain actual loss
sufficient to complete his cause of action, as Mr Steinfeld submits,
when each investment was made."
- I think that the first part of
this reasoning cannot be sustained. The claimant's risk of being
subjected to an order under regulatory legislation cannot to my mind be
termed a contingent liability or a fetter on the claimant's assets. The
other way of expressing the ground of decision is more sustainable, on
the basis that the claimant had got from his solicitor a defective
scheme rather than one which was proof against regulatory attack. Even
so, it seems to me close to the borderline. I see no good reason to
stretch the "defective product" analogy to cover every situation in
which a professional or commercial adviser carelessly gives inadequate
advice and so produces a state of affairs which carries the risk of
future loss; and to do so would be contrary to the unanimous decision of
this House in Nykredit [1997] 1 WLR 1627.
- I would therefore reject
Sephton's submission that it was enough that the Law Society was, every
time that misappropriations were made after the issue of defective
accountant's certificates, at risk of having to meet claims from clients
from whom Mr Payne misappropriated funds—even if that risk (of a future
eventuality) is beguilingly expressed as "exposure to claims"
(suggesting a present or current condition). It was in a sense a
detriment, but it was not a detriment of the sort described in
Forster v Outred & Co [1982] 1 WLR 86, 94 as understood and
developed in the later authorities.
- That conclusion is reinforced,
in my opinion, by the public law character of the Law Society's
functions as trustee of the compensation scheme, but it does not depend
on that special feature.
- For these reasons, and for the
fuller reasons given by my noble and learned friends Lord Hoffmann and
Lord Mance (whose opinions I have had the advantage of considering in
draft, and with which I am in full agreement) I would dismiss the appeal
and make the order which Lord Hoffmann proposes.
LORD MANCE
My Lords,
Introduction
- This is the second occasion
within a short span when the House has to consider a question of
limitation in the context of a claim in tort for economic loss.
Haward v. Fawcetts [2006] UKHL 9; [2006] 1 WLR 682 concerned the knowledge required for the
purposes of the special time limit for negligence actions "where facts
relevant to the cause of action are not known at [the] date of accrual"
(cf Limitation Act 1980 section 14A). The present case raises a prior
issue regarding the date of accrual of the cause of action for the
purposes of section 2 of the Limitation Act 1980, which provides that
"An action founded on tort shall not be brought after the expiration of
six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued".
- A cause of action in tort may
accrue for the purposes of section 2 of the Limitation Act 1980
(formerly section 2 of the 1939 Act) before its beneficiary knew or had
reason to know of it: cf Cartledge v. E. Jopling & Sons Ltd.
[1963] AC 758 (personal injury), Pirelli General Cable Works Ltd.
v. Oscar Faber and Partners [1983] 2 AC 1 (latent damage to
buildings) and Forster v. Outred & Co. [1982] 1 WLR 86
(professional negligence). The legislative response was not to alter the
time when the cause of action is to be taken as accruing, but to
introduce alternative three-year time limits running from the date of
knowledge. Following the case of Cartledge, the Limitation Act
1963 introduced such a time limit for personal injuries (now reflected
in section 11 of the 1980 Act). Following the 24th Report in November
1984 of the Law Reform Committee on Latent Damage (Cmnd. 9390), the
Latent Damage Act 1986 inserted section 14A into the 1980 Act providing
such a time limit for other actions for damages for negligence.
Parliament thus re-affirmed that a cause of action for damages for
negligence may accrue, without its beneficiary knowing or having reason
to know of it. In the present case, the key to the accrual of any cause
of action is whether there was a breach of duty which led to relevant
and measurable damage.
- The Law Society's claim is for
loss sustained by its Compensation Fund in respect of a sole
practitioner, Andrew Payne, who practised under the name of Payne &
Co. from 1986 to 1996. The claim is against a firm of accountants
("Sephtons") retained by Mr Payne to provide the Law Society annually
with accountants' reports containing the information prescribed by
section 34 of the Solicitors' Act 1974. Such information goes to
compliance with the Solicitors Accounts Rules of 1991 (or, prior to 1st
June 1992, 1986). For the purposes of the preliminary issue before the
House, it is accepted that between about January 1990 and March 1996 Mr
Payne misappropriated client monies. But Sephtons, through their
partner, Mr Mascord (now deceased) provided clean annual reports for
each of the years of practice ending on 30th April in the years 1988 to
1995.
- The Law Society alleges that, in
reliance on such reports, it took no step to investigate or intervene in
Payne & Co's practice, and Mr Payne was able to continue to
misappropriate client monies and to cover up prior misappropriations by
teeming and lading. The alarm was only raised in May 1996 following a
complaint by one of Payne & Co's clients. The Society commissioned
an inspection of Payne & Co's books of account. This on 17th May
1996 revealed a shortage on client account of at least £763,956 and that
at least £50,000 had already been misappropriated by June 1991. On 20th
May 1996 the Society intervened in Mr Payne's practice under section 35
and Schedule 1 of the 1974 Act. The first claim by a client of Payne
& Co on the Society's Compensation Fund was made on 8th July 1996,
and the first payment out of the Fund was made in October 1996. By 8th
January 2003 the Fund had paid out a total of £1,245,764.11 to a number
of claimants.
- Accountants such as Sephtons owe
the Law Society a duty of care when preparing reports under section 34
of the Solicitors Act 1974. This was confirmed on 29th June 2000 by the
Court of Appeal in Law Society v. KPMG Peat Marwick [2000] 1 WLR 1921. The Law Society had already instructed solicitors in August 1996
with regard to possible proceedings against Sephtons. A letter before
action was sent to Sephtons on 8th October 1996. But no claim for
negligence was issued until 16th May 2002. A further claim alleging
fraudulent misrepresentation was issued on 2nd December 2002. Sephtons
raised the question of limitation in May 2002, and preliminary issues
were ordered in respect of these claims in April 2003. The House is only
concerned with the preliminary issue relating to the claim for
negligence.
- Any cause of action by the
Society for negligence accrued when the Society first suffered any
"actual" damage of a relevant and measurable kind bearing in mind the
measure of damage applicable to the wrong in question: see Forster v.
Outred & Co. [1982] 1 WLR 86, 94 and Nykredit Mortgage Bank
Plc v. Edward Erdman Group Ltd. (No 2) [1997] 1 WLR 1627, 1630D-F, 1631D and 1632D per Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead in a
speech with which all other members of the House agreed. The Law Society
submits that this only occurred when in October 1996 it first resolved
to make a payment out of its Compensation Fund to one of Mr Payne's
former clients. Possible fall-back dates for the Society are July 1996
when it first received a claim from such a client or 20th May 1996 when
it first intervened in Mr Payne's practice. Sephtons submits that actual
loss was sustained each time that the Society received from Sephtons a
clean but negligently prepared report and relied upon it by allowing Mr
Payne to continue to practise uninterrupted; alternatively, that it was
sustained when Mr Payne first misappropriated further client monies
after the Society had received such a report and relied upon it by
allowing Mr Payne to continue in practice. If the Law Society is right,
then any cause of action for negligence arose within six years prior to
its issue of a claim. If Sephtons are right, the Law Society's claim for
negligence is time-barred. The three year period in section 14A cannot
assist the Society, since it knew the relevant facts no later than 1996.
- The Compensation Fund is a
statutory grant-making fund first established under the Solicitors Act
1941, and now established under section 36 of the Solicitors Act 1974.
It is funded by a levy on practising members of profession. When it was
first established in 1941, there was no requirement of professional
indemnity insurance in respect of solicitors - this was only introduced
by the 1974 Act - and there would in any event have been obvious
obstacles facing any insurance-based scheme operating to protect clients
and the public in respect of dishonesty or misappropriation of monies by
sole practitioners. There is no necessary equation between the redress
available by a grant out of the Fund and that available in circumstances
covered by professional indemnity insurance: see R v. Law Society, ex
p. Mortgage Express Ltd. [1997] 2 All ER 348, 361H-J per Lord
Bingham of Cornhill CJ.
- Under section 36(2), the Society
may make a grant out of the Fund for the purpose of relieving loss or
hardship where satisfied (a) that a person has suffered or is likely to
suffer loss in consequence of dishonesty on the part of a solicitor, or
his employee in connection with his practice or a trust of which he was
trustee or (b) that a person has suffered or is likely to suffer
hardship in consequence of failure on the part of a solicitor to account
for money which has come into his hands in connection with his practice
or any such trust or (c) that a solicitor has suffered or is likely to
suffer loss or hardship by reason of his liability to any of his firm's
clients in consequence of some act or default of any of his partners or
employees in circumstances where but for the liability of that solicitor
a grant might have been made out of the Compensation Fund to some other
person.
- In deciding whether or not to
make a grant out of the Fund, the Society has under section 36 a
discretion, though one which is susceptible to judicial review to ensure
that it is exercised on rational and intelligible grounds: see R v
Law Society, ex p Mortgage Express Ltd. [1997] 2 All ER 348 and R
v Law Society, ex p Ingman Foods Oy AB [1997] 2 All ER 666. In the
former case, the Society exercised its discretion to limit the payment
of compensation to that part of loss incurred through entering into a
transaction on security brought about by a solicitor's dishonesty which
could be attributed to such dishonesty, as opposed to a subsequent fall
in the market. It did this, although a solicitor's duty is, in contrast
to a valuer's, not confined to obtaining or advising on adequate
security. The court upheld the exercise of discretion. The breadth of
the discretion and the fact that its exercise depends on the policies
and circumstances at the time of any claim on the Fund appear from the
judgment of Lord Bingham of Cornhill MR at p 360:
"Administering a limited fund exposed to potentially unlimited
demands, and with a membership whose resources are finite, the Law
Society are in practice bound (and in law they are entitled) to give
priority to those classes of claim which they regard, for sustainable
reasons, as having the most pressing claim to be met (wholly or in
part) out of the fund. This inevitably means that some applicants who
succeed at the first stage fail at the second. That is because they do
not have a right to compensation which they are entitled to enforce.
All they have is a right to seek a favourable exercise of discretion"
In the latter case, Latham J upheld the
Society's exercise of discretion to refuse a payment to an applicant
whose recklessness the Society regarded as justifying a 100%
reduction.
- The present case falls within
category (b) in section 36(2), that is failure to account causing
clients of Mr Payne to suffer or be likely to suffer hardship. From the
moment when Sephtons first issued any report in alleged breach of duty,
the Law Society was exposed to the possibility that Mr Payne would as a
result be able to continue to misappropriate client monies. From the
moment that Mr Payne did this, the Law Society was exposed to the
possibility that a client would as a result suffer or be likely to
suffer hardship, and might make a claim which the Law Society, as a
matter of public law, would have to consider under its grant-making
discretion and might, depending on the circumstances, have to meet to
avoid the risk of a successful application for judicial review. These
considerations, in Sephtons' submission, are enough to mean that the
cause of action accrued at one or other of the times which it advances.
- During the course of oral
submissions Sephtons also referred to the delay which their negligence
is alleged to have caused in the investigation of Mr Payne's practice
and activities, and suggested that this alone would have added to the
cost of eventual investigation. But Mr Michael Briggs QC, sitting as an
additional judge at first instance, was not satisfied that the delay had
involved the Society in any increased costs or loss. So it is
unnecessary to consider that aspect further. Further, the duty presently
alleged by the Society is to the Society's Compensation Fund, not to the
Society as regulator, and I express no view as to whether increased
investigation costs could as such ever constitute relevant loss.
- The Law Society submits that
mere exposure of the Fund to a possibility of loss is not sufficient.
The loss must be relevant and measurable. Sephtons' reports and Mr
Payne's misappropriations did not cause the Society to enter into any
transaction or lead to any change in its legal position or to any legal
liability on its part. Until one of Mr Payne's clients suffered or was
likely to suffer hardship and made a corresponding claim on the Fund,
the Society had no duty even in public law in relation to any such
misappropriation. Even then, it had no liability in private law, and its
only duty was to assess and respond to the claim on a rational and
intelligible basis having regard to the purposes for which the statutory
Fund is established. Accordingly, in the Society's submission there was
no relevant and measurable loss until 20th May 1996 or later.
- There is considerable case-law
concerning situations where a person's legal position has, through
negligence, been altered to his immediate, measurable economic
disadvantage, and it has been held that a cause of action accrued
although the beneficiary neither knew nor had any reason to know about
its existence. In Forster v. Outred & Co. [1982] 1 WLR 86 a
mother, in reliance on negligently given advice, executed a mortgage
over her home to secure her son's borrowings, thereby immediately
diminishing her home's value. In D. W. Moore & Co. Ltd. v.
Ferrier [1988] 1 WLR 267 due to solicitors' negligent advice, the
claimant company took on Mr Ferrier under contractual agreements which
failed to prevent him, if he left, from establishing his own competing
business. The claimant's "rights under the two agreements were
demonstrably less valuable than they would have been had adequate
restrictive covenants been included" (per Neill LJ at p.278G). "Instead
of receiving a potentially valuable chose in action they received one
that was valueless" (per Bingham LJ at p.279H). In Baker v. Ollard
& Bentley (unreported), 12th May 1982 (cited in D. W. Moore
& Co. Ltd. v. Ferrier [1988] 1 WLR 267), the claimant due to
solicitors' negligence acquired a less valuable interest in a house held
on trust for sale, rather than a separate and saleable interest in its
first floor. In Bell v. Peter Browne & Co. [1990] 2 QB 495,
after a marriage breakdown, a solicitor's negligence led to the husband
putting the matrimonial home into his wife's name, without any
accompanying document being prepared or any caution lodged to protect
the one-sixth interest which the wife had agreed that the husband should
have on any sale of the house. His resulting equitable interest was
"clearly less valuable" than an interest secured by a charge or
protected by a deed of trust (per Beldam LJ at p. 510F); further, even
though his equitable interest could have been protected at any time
until the wife sold the home, that would have involved at least some
costs recoverable in damages from the defendant (per Nicholls LJ at p.
503G).
- In Knapp v. Ecclesiastical
Insurance Group plc [1998] PNLR 172, the Court of Appeal examined
the previous case-law in detail. It concluded, consistently with prior
first instance decisions, that, where a fire insurance policy was, due
to an insurance broker's negligence, voidable for non-disclosure, the
insured's cause of action accrued on its placing. The insured were
regarded as suffering some measurable loss on placing, although the fire
and the insurers' avoidance lay in the future. Hobhouse LJ at p.186D
cited with approval Saville LJ's explanation of the case-law in First
National Commercial Bank plc v. Humberts [1995] 2 All ER 673,
679b-d:
"… much reliance was placed on the cases where the claimant
entered into a transaction which through a breach of duty owed to the
claimant provided the claimant with less rights than should have been
secured, or imposed liabilities or obligations on the claimant which
should not have been imposed. … In all those cases, however, the court
was able to conclude that the transaction then and there caused the
claimant loss, on the basis that if the injured party had been put in
the position he would have occupied but for the breach of duty, the
transaction in question would have provided greater rights, or imposed
lesser liabilities or obligations than was the case; and that the
difference between these two states of affairs could be quantified in
money terms at the date of the transaction."
- A similar line of authority
establishes that the cause of action against a solicitor whose
negligence deprives his client of a claim which the solicitor was
engaged to pursue accrues when the claim becomes time barred or liable
to be struck out for want of prosecution (thereby obviously eliminating
or reducing the value of any claim): Hatton v. Chafes [2003] EWCA Civ 341; Polley v. Warner Goodman & Street [2003] EWCA Civ 1013; [2003] PNLR 784.
- In all these cases except
Forster v. Outred [1982] 1 WLR 86 the defendant failed to
preserve or procure for the claimant an asset (including a particular
chose in action) which could and should have been preserved or protected
by proper performance of the defendant's duty in relation to the
transaction affecting the claimant's legal position. In Forster v.
Outred the claimant's case was that, but for the defendant's
negligence, she would never have entered into the transaction at all.
But in that case, by doing so, she clearly depreciated the value of her
house in a measurable way. However, while a defendant's failure to
preserve or protect a particular asset by proper performance of his duty
in relation to a particular transaction may readily be seen to have
caused measurable loss, negligence causing a claimant to enter into a
transaction which he would not otherwise have entered may not
immediately, or indeed ever, cause measurable loss to any particular
asset.
- In a number of authorities the
court has made clear that a claimant does not necessarily suffer loss
merely by being caused by negligence to enter into a transaction to
which he would not otherwise have agreed. This does not of course mean
that a claimant may not suffer measurable loss through negligence
without entering into any transaction which changes his legal position -
take e.g. the situation of a defendant entrusted with deeds or valuables
who simply loses them. The basic proposition was however firmly stated
by Ackner LJ in UBAF Ltd. v. European American Banking Corporation
[1984] QB 713, 725:
"The mere fact that the innocent but negligent misrepresentations
caused the plaintiffs to enter into a contract which they otherwise
would not have entered into, does not inevitably mean that they had
suffered damage by merely entering into the contract."
- This passage was taken up in the
reasoning of the High Court of Australia in Wardley Australia Ltd. v.
The State of Western Australia (1992) 175 CLR 514, 527-8, where the
majority judgment adopted the passage in initial comments on the concept
of loss or damage and explained that:
"That is because it was not self-evident that the value of the
chose in action which the plaintiff acquired, the right to repayment
of a loan, was worth less than the amount paid to the borrower at the
time of entry into the loan agreement. Evidence was required to
establish that fact, if it were a fact."
- The same point is confirmed by
the Nykredit case [1997] 1 WLR 1627 where property was acquired as security on the basis of
negligent valuation advice. Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead said at
p.1631C-D:
"In one sense the lender undoubtedly suffers detriment when the
loan transaction is completed. He parts with his money, which he would
not have done had he been properly advised. In another sense he may
suffer no loss at that stage because often there will be no certainty
he will actually lose any of his money: the borrower may not default.
Financial loss is possible, but not certain. Indeed, it may not even
be likely. Further, in some cases, and depending on the facts, even if
the borrower does default the overvalued security may still be
sufficient."
As to when the lender first sustained measurable, relevant loss, Lord
Nicholls said at p.1631D-E that the basic comparison was between the
amount lent plus interest, and the value of the rights acquired, namely
the borrower's covenant and the true value of the overvalued property,
but that a further enquiry fell to be made in the light of the House's
decision in Banque Bruxelles Lambert SA v. Eagle Star Insurance Co.
Ltd. [1997] AC 191 that a valuer is only liable for the adverse
consequences attributable to any deficiency in the valuation. He went on
at p.1632A:
"Typically, the answer to this further inquiry will correspond
with the amount of the loss as shown by the basic comparison, for the
lender would not have entered into the transaction had he been
properly advised, but limited to the extent of the over-valuation. …..
The basic comparison gives rise to issues of fact. The moment at which
the comparison first reveals a loss will depend on the facts of each
case. Such difficulties as there may be are evidential and practical
difficulties, not difficulties in principle.
He added at p.1632C-G:
"Ascribing a value to the borrower's covenant should not be unduly
troublesome. A comparable exercise regarding lessees' covenants is a
routine matter when valuing property. Sometimes the comparison will
reveal a loss from the inception of the loan transaction. The borrower
may be a company with no other assets, its sole business may comprise
redeveloping and reselling the property, and for repayment the lender
may be looking solely to his security. In such a case, if the property
is worth less than the amount of the loan, relevant and measurable
loss will be sustained at once. In other cases the borrower's covenant
may have value, and until there is default the lender may presently
sustain no loss even though the security is worth less than the amount
of the loan. Conversely, in some cases there may be no loss even when
the borrower defaults. A borrower may default after a while but when
he does so, despite the overvaluation, the security may still be
adequate.
It should be acknowledged at once that, to greater or lesser
extent, quantification of the lender's loss is bound to be less
certain, and therefore less satisfactory, if the quantification
exercise is carried out before, rather than after, the security is
ultimately sold. This consideration weighed heavily with the High
Court of Australia in Wardley Australia Ltd. v. State of Western
Australia 175 CLR 514. But the difficulties of assessment at the
earlier stage do not seem to me to lead to the conclusion that at the
earlier stage the lender has suffered no measurable loss and
has no cause of action, and that it is only when the assessment
becomes more straightforward or final that loss first arises and with
it the cause of action.
Indeed, for the cause of action to arise only when the lender
realises his security would be a highly unattractive proposition. It
would mean that, however obvious it may be that the lender will not
recover his money, he cannot start proceedings. He must wait until he
manages to sell the property, a process which may be protracted. This
would be a surprising stance for the law to take. …"
- In Wardley Australia Ltd. v.
The State of Western Australia (1992) 175 CLR 514 the State was
allegedly led by misrepresentations by Wardley about Rothwells Ltd., to
grant to the bank an indemnity, which it would not otherwise have
granted, in respect of a facility granted by the bank to Rothwells Ltd.
The bank suffered loss and made a claim on the indemnity which the State
settled by making a substantial payment. The issue arose whether the
State's cause of action against Wardley accrued when the indemnity was
granted or when it was called upon. The High Court held that the
indemnity generated "an executory and contingent liability" and that the
State "suffered no loss until that contingency was fulfilled and time
did not begin to run until that event" (p 534). The High Court indicated
that the contingency was fulfilled and the State incurred a liability to
the bank "if and when the Bank's relevant 'net loss' was ascertained and
quantified, subject to the making of a claim for payment by the Bank"
(pp.524-5). In considering Forster v. Outred and other English
decisions decided up to 1992, the majority said in their judgment at
p.531:
"It has been contended that the principle underlying the English
decisions extends to the point that a plaintiff sustains loss on entry
into an agreement notwithstanding that the loss to which the plaintiff
is subjected by the agreement is a loss upon a contingency. For our
part, we doubt that the decisions travel so far. Rather, it seems to
us, the decisions in cases which involve contingent loss were
decisions which turned on the plaintiff sustaining measurable loss at
an earlier time, quite apart from the contingent loss which threatened
at a later date."
They added that, if the English authorities
stood for the wider proposition, they did not agree with
them.
- Wardley was considered in
Knapp [1998] PNLR 172. Hobhouse LJ viewed it at p.178A as
adopting a different approach to the English approach. Buxton LJ at
p.192A-D endorsed the rejection in Wardley of any proposition
that
"the plaintiff necessarily suffers loss on entry to an
agreement notwithstanding that the loss to which [he] is subjected by
the agreement is loss upon a contingency: what is required is actual
loss on entry, quite apart from the contingent loss threatened at a
later date."
The rejection in Wardley and by Buxton LJ of any such
proposition is consistent with the English authorities discussed in
paragraphs 71 to 73 above. Since the State's liability through entering
into the indemnity was purely contingent on whatever might happen to
Rothwells and the bank facility and no particular State asset was
depreciated in value on entry into of the indemnity, I think that the
same result as the High Court reached in Wardley should also be
reached in this jurisdiction.
- Whether or not that is, however,
accepted, no English authority indicates and I do not consider that the
Society's present cause of action should be regarded as accruing before
any change in its legal position occurred and it received any claim on
the Fund. First and foremost, the Society's legal position remained
unchanged, even in public law, at least until after it received a claim.
Second, it was not possible until after a claim was received for anyone
to know which client(s) of Payne & Co might suffer what loss,
whether any of them might be able, and choose, to assert that they had
as a result suffered hardship justifying a grant out of the Fund and
what the circumstances were in which the Society would have to exercise
its discretion to make or refuse a grant. Third, in this situation, it
is not appropriate to talk of the Fund or any other specific asset of
the Society as having suffered any loss at least until after a hardship
claim was made on the Society.
- It may be that, if the facts had
been known contemporaneously, some statistical or experience-based
assessment could have been made of the likelihood of a claim or claims
emerging, and of the Fund having eventually to make payments, as a
result of Mr Payne being able to continue his scheme of fraud. A similar
assessment might be made of the risk of future loss of a physical asset
(deeds or valuables) of which a solicitor was failing to take reasonable
care, but which had not yet been lost or stolen. But I do not consider
that the law should treat purely contingent loss assessed on so remote a
basis as sufficiently measurable, in the absence of any change in the
claimant's legal position and of any diminution in value of any
particular asset. Even where negligence brings about a specific
transaction and thus a change in the claimant's legal position, Lord
Nicholls observed in Nykredit [1997] 1 WLR 1627 in the passage at p.1631C-D cited in paragraph 73 above, that
the mere entry into the transaction under which "Financial loss is
possible, but not certain" is not sufficient detriment.
- Looking at the matter more
generally, I also see no particular reason to accelerate the accrual of
a cause of action where there has been no transaction changing the
claimant's legal position and no diminution in value of any particular
asset. Where such factors are present the English authorities considered
in paragraphs 67-70 above take a clear-cut, though perhaps strict, view.
The House has not been asked to review such authorities, nor would I
think it appropriate to do so in the light of the way that they and the
English legislation have developed. But where such factors are not
present, I see attraction in the approach taken by the Australian High
Court in Wardley 175 CLR 514, the effect of which is that unless
and until a remote contingency eventuates the claimant is not expected
to issue proceedings which he would not normally issue or wish to issue
unless and until that point arrives.
- Sephtons point out that in
Nykredit [1997] 1 WLR 1627, 1630 Lord Nicholls endorsed the Court of Appeal's approval in
Forster v. Outred & Co. of counsel's submission that actual
damage meant "any detriment, liability or loss capable of assessment in
money terms". There can, as I have said, be situations of measurable
monetary detriment or loss, even though there has been no change in a
person's legal position. But the passage which I have quoted from
p.1631C-D in Nykredit shows that Lord Nicholls was far from
accepting that everything that can loosely be described as "detriment"
will constitute damage for the purposes of a tort claim. Lord Nicholls'
words are not in any event to be read as a statute.
- Sephtons also rely on Lord
Nicholls' statement at p.1633C-D that "within the bounds of sense and
reasonableness the policy of the law should be to advance, rather than
retard, the accrual of a cause of action" and that
"This is especially so if the law provides parallel causes of
action in contract and in tort in respect of the same conduct. The
disparity between the time when these parallel causes of action arise
should be smaller, rather than greater".
Differences between the limitation periods in
contract and tort do however exist. These were indeed a central part of
the argument mounted unsuccessfully in Henderson v. Merrett
Syndicates Ltd. [1995] 2 AC 145 to the effect that concurrent causes
of action in contract and tort should not be recognised at all (cf pp.
151H-152B and 162G-163D). In his speech (with whom all other members of
the House agreed) Lord Goff of Chieveley rejected what he described as
"the temptation of elegance" (p.186B). He said that
"The result may be untidy; but, given that the tortious duty is
imposed by the general law, and the contractual duty is attributable
to the will of the parties, I do not find it objectionable that the
claimant may be entitled to take advantage of the remedy which is most
advantageous to him …" (cf p.194A-E).
In the present case, there is no question of
the Society having any concurrent remedy in contract, and, even if there
had been, there are limits to the extent to which the accrual of causes
of action in contract and tort can be assimilated. No issue regarding
relevant and measurable damage can arise in contract, since nominal
damages can be awarded for any breach. Even in Nykredit [1997] 1 WLR 1627 any contractual claim accrued at a different time to any
tortious claim. Here, the requirement of relevant and measurable damage
before the accrual of a tortious claim has to be interpreted in the
context of purely contingent liability occurring without any immediate
change in the claimant's legal position, and I see no reason to add to
the strictness of the English legal position by treating the claimant as
having suffered measurable loss before the contingency materialised.
- Finally, Sephtons rely on the
further Court of Appeal authority of Gordon v. J. B. Wheatley &
Co. [2000] Lloyd's Rep PN 605. There, due to the defendant
solicitors' alleged negligence, the claimant was led to carry on,
through various companies, business operations in a manner which
amounted to the carrying on by such companies of unauthorised investment
business within the Financial Services Act 1986, section 3. Under
section 6 of that Act the court had power to order any person
contravening section 3 "and any other person who appears to the court to
have been knowingly concerned in the contravention to take such steps as
the court may direct for restoring the parties to the position in which
they were before the transaction was entered into". In due course the
Securities and Investments Board ("SIB") investigated the claimant's
operations and alleged a breach of section 3. The claimant approached
fresh solicitors and on their advice resolved the matter by agreeing to
indemnify the companies for over £676,000. He sued the defendant
solicitors within six years of doing this, but more than six years after
the entry into of the unauthorised investment transactions (and also
more than six years after he approached the fresh solicitors and
incurred their fees). Kennedy LJ, with whom Kay LJ agreed, held that
actual loss was incurred once the unauthorised investments were made,
since "the plaintiff was exposed to the risk of being required by a
court … to restore the parties (i.e. investors and borrowers) to the
position in which they were before the transactions were entered into"
(p.612). This was, he went on "a liability, albeit a contingent
liability, a fetter on his assets".
- In my view this reasoning is
open to the objection that there was no liability, no change in the
claimant's legal position, unless and until the SIB intervened and the
court ordered or the claimant agreed. Further, unlike the position in
for example D W Moore & Co. Ltd. v. Ferrier [1988] 1 WLR 267
or Knapp v. Ecclesiatical Insurance Group plc [1998] PNLR 172,
the risk to which the claimant was exposed did not directly arise from
or affect the transaction into which the defendant negligently allowed
the claimant to cause his companies to enter. Rather it arose from the
collateral regulatory powers and intervention of third parties, the SIB
and the court, under independent legislation. I do not think that the
analysis applied in Knapp to a voidable contract between two
parties can stretch to cover this situation. In my view, therefore, this
aspect of the Court of Appeal's decision is unsustainable. The actual
outcome in the case may have been justified by the Court's further
conclusion (about which I need express no view) that actual loss was
incurred when the fresh solicitors were instructed and liability for
their fees was incurred.
- For the above reasons, as well
as those given in the opinions of Lord Hoffmann and Lord Walker of
Gestingthorpe, I would conclude that a cause of action in tort did not
accrue in the Law Society's favour against Sephtons until it first
received a claim on its Fund from one of Payne & Co's clients. This
is sufficient to lead to the dismissal of this appeal. Although it is
not material on the facts, I would not, as at present advised, accept
the Society's argument that such accrual was further postponed until
whenever the Society resolved to meet a claim. It appears to me more
realistic to identify the fulfilment of the contingency on which the
Society's liability depended with the time when it received a claim in
relation to which it became bound to exercise its statutory discretion
to make a payment in accordance with its public law duties.
- It follows that (1) the appeal should be
dismissed so far as it relates to the Court of Appeal's decision to set
aside the order made by Mr Michael Briggs QC in relation to the expiry
of the limitation period in respect of the claim for negligence, but
that (2) the Court of Appeal's declaration that the Law Society's cause
of action for negligence only arose when it first resolved to make a
payment out of the Compensation Fund to a former client of Mr Payne
should be substituted by a declaration that "the Claimant did not suffer
damage in respect of its Compensation Fund for the purposes of its
claim, and its cause of action did not accrue, more than 6 years prior
to its issue on 16th May 2002 of its claim for negligence", which is all
that it is necessary to decide for the purposes of these proceedings. It
is in the circumstances unnecessary to consider the Law Society's
cross-appeal to the effect that Sephtons had in any event estopped
and/or precluded themselves by their communications and/or conduct from
relying on any limitation defence that they would otherwise enjoy, and I
would therefore make no order on the cross-appeal.
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