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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Royal Bank Of Scotland v Miller [2001] EWCA Civ 344 (27 February 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/344.html Cite as: (2001) 82 P & CR 31, [2002] QB 255, [2001] EWCA Civ 344, [2001] 3 WLR 523 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
SITTING IN THE MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
ON APPEAL FROM THE ACCRINGTON COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE APPLETON)
Manchester M3 Tuesday 27 February 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
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THE ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND | Claimant/Respondent | |
- v - | ||
ANNE CATHERINE MILLER | Defendant/Applicant |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7421 4040 Fax: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR S COGLEY (Instructed by Messrs Cobbetts, Manchester M2 4WB) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"All the Mortgagor's liabilities to the Bank of any kind (whether present or future actual or contingent and whether incurred alone or jointly with another) including banking charges and commission."
"From the maturity proceeds of personal equity plans in 10 years time."
"If the Bank so decides, the Loan shall become immediately due and payable by the Customer with interest in so far as then remaining unpaid, if any of the following events occurs:-
(a) non-payment of any of the Payments within 14 days from the date on which it is due to be paid;
....
(f) a default arises under any other liability of the Customer to the Bank."
"The sad fact is that the business climate which Mrs Miller took a business view on, the market went into reverse and she was unable to sustain trading that would have sustained the loan."
"Where the mortgagee under a mortgage of land which consists of or includes a dwelling-house brings an action in which he claims possession of the mortgaged property, not being an action for foreclosure in which a claim for possession of the mortgaged property is also made, the court may exercise any of powers conferred on it by subsection (2) below if it appears to the court that in the event of its exercising the power the mortgagor is likely to be able within a reasonable period to pay any sums due under the mortgage or to remedy a default consisting of a breach of any other obligation arising under or by virtue of the mortgage."
"The court-
(a) may adjourn the proceedings, or
(b) on giving judgment, or making an order, for delivery of possession of the mortgaged property, or at any time before the execution of such judgment or order, may-
(i) stay or suspend execution of the judgment or order, or
(ii) postpone the date for delivery of possession, for such period or periods as the court thinks reasonable."
"The Mortgagor will not without the Bank's prior written consent...
4.1.3 Dispose of or part with or share possession or occupation of the Property the Charged Assets the Goodwill or the Licences."
"Where by a mortgage of land which consists of or includes a dwelling-house, or by any agreement between the mortgagee under such a mortgage and the mortgagor, the mortgagor is entitled or is to be permitted to pay the principal sum secured by instalments or otherwise to defer payment of it in whole or in part, but provision is also made for earlier payment in the event of any default by the mortgagor or of a demand by the mortgagee or otherwise, then for the purposes of section 36 of the Administration of Justice Act 1970 .... a court may treat as due under the mortgage on account of the principal sum secured and of interest on it only such amounts as the mortgagor would have expected to be required to pay if there had been no such provision for earlier payment."
"Deferment, I think, involves the deferment of payment after it has become due, and quite clearly in this case there appears to me to be no provision, either in the agreement between the parties or in the mortgage itself, by which, on any realistic construction, it can be said that payment by the customer was to be 'deferred', or that the customer was permitted to 'defer' payment. Mr Cutting has in fact submitted that every case where the principal money does not become payable immediately the mortgage is executed is a case where the mortgagor is entitled to defer payment. That is a submission which I find is impossible to accept."
"Habib Bank Ltd v Tailor was a case in which what was before the court was a charge to secure an ordinary banking overdraft so that the subject matter of the debt was one which was due immediately upon the making of an unconditional demand. That is a rather different case, at least socially, in regard to the purpose of this legislation, from the present case where what is primarily in question is a mortgage of a fixed sum for a fixed term. I do not find anything in Habib Bank Ltd v Tailor which prevents this court giving to the conception of 'deferred payment' a definition which includes any case in which there is a stated period before the end of which payment does not require to be made which extends into a defined future, and it seems to me that that condition is satisfied by the language of the agreement which, in its extended interpretation, which is not in dispute, is imported by the language 'period of loan 25 years'. It seems to be, therefore, that it can without doing violence to the language of the section and by way of giving effect and purpose to this section, be construed in that way so that there is, thus looked at, a provision here for deferred payment to be found in the agreement. There is no question but that there is also a provision for earlier payment in the event of any default, because that is to be found in clause 4 of the agreement. It seems to me, therefore, that this is a case in which section 8 of the Administration of Justice Act 1973 applies to modify and control the language of section 36 of the Administration of Justice Act 1970 and for that reason I would allow the appeal."
"There are broadly two conventional methods by which people buy houses. The first is the instalment type mortgage taken out with the building society; the other method is to borrow the money from the bank and at the same time take out an endowment policy which, when it matures, will provide sufficient money to pay off the mortgage."
"It seems to me that it would be highly improbable that Parliament would intend such relief to apply only to instalment mortgages taken out with a building society and not to apply to the alternative and increasingly popular form of finance by loan from a bank, backed by an endowment policy. I am satisfied, for the reasons given by Sir John Arnold P. that the wording 'or otherwise to defer payment of it in whole or in part' are deliberately inserted to cover this second type of mortgage transaction where there is no obligation to repay the capital until the end of the term of the loan.
Like my Lord, I do not think that this court is driven by Habib Bank Ltd v Tailor in which the court was never considering the problem currently before us, to hold that any different and more literal construction should be applied. It is very difficult to give a literal construction to this section for the reasons that have already been elaborated by Sir John Arnold P; it must be given a purposive construction, and, giving it that construction, I am quite satisfied that it covers the present transaction and that for these reasons, and those given by Sir John Arnold P., this appeal should be allowed."