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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Wright v Cherrytree Finance Ltd & Ors [2001] EWCA Civ 449 (26 March 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/449.html Cite as: [2001] 2 All ER (Comm) 877, (2001) 82 P & CR DG10, [2001] EWCA Civ 449 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE BRISTOL COUNTY COURT
(Mr Justice Neuberger)
Strand London WC2 |
||
B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE HALE and
SIR CHRISTOPHER STAUGHTON
____________________
JUNE WRIGHT | Claimant | |
(Respondent) | ||
-v- | ||
CHERRYTREE FINANCE LIMITED | Defendant | |
(Appellant) | ||
and | ||
DARREN SCOTT and CORA SCOTT | ||
Part 20 Defendants |
____________________
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 N Sproull (instructed by Messrs Kirby Simcox, Bristol) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Claimant.
The Part 20 Defendants did not appear and were not represented.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
(1)that there was actual undue influence upon Mrs Fry from Mr and Mrs Scott and misrepresentation from Mr Scott;(2)that this was a material factor in Mrs Fry's decision to apply for a loan and execute the mortgage;
(3)that Cherrytree Finance Limited had constructive notice of undue influence, although not of misrepresentation; and
(4)that Cherrytree Finance did not do sufficient to dispel the effect of undue influence, of which they had constructive notice.
The loan was granted on 7th October 1994 in the form of a cheque for £21,000. The balance of £2,387 was paid to an agent who had introduced Mr Scott to the lenders. It had been agreed between Mrs Fry and Mr Scott that he would pay the instalments required (as it seems to me, of interest and capital, although the judge only says interest). That was calculated at 18.9%, amounting to £498.27 per month. The finance company was prepared to accept a concessionary rate, as they described it, of 12.9%, leading to a payment of £381.34 per month if payments were made on time.
"Darren Wayne ScottDate of Birth:8.8.61
Joint/Spouse: June FryDate of Birth: 24.6.38
Present Address: 52 West Park Rd, Corsham, Wiltshire."
"that the only occupiers of the property at 52 West Park Road, Corsham, Wiltshire SN13 9LU are:-
NameAgeSexRelationship
DARREN WAYNE SCOTT
JUNE FRY"
"Dear Sirs,
Please accept this our irrevocable declaration that if the above loan completes we would like you to make the cheque payable to Mr Darren Wayne Scott as a matter of convenience as we do not hold a joint account.
Trusting this meets to your satisfaction.
Thank you in advance for your urgency and co-operation in this matter and if you have any questions please call us."
"It is true that she had not stayed at home all her life. She had worked, but the nature of her jobs were such that I am satisfied that they would not have given her any insight whatever into commercial matters. She was a dinner lady at a school, she covered tennis balls at home, she filled motor cars with petrol at filling stations.
Secondly, after her husband's death the claimant had relied on Mr and Mrs Scott. ... they both accepted that, particularly during the period following the death of her husband, the claimant had placed trust and confidence in them and that she was dependent on them in relation to financial affairs. I should also say that it appears from the evidence that, apart from her son, who was of no assistance in, and ignorant about, commercial matters, the claimant had no one else to turn to for advice."
"Thirdly, I accept the evidence of the claimant that she signed the various documents, which she undoubtedly did sign, without reading them; she was told by Mr Scott - possibly by Mrs Scott, but certainly by Mr Scott - where to sign and she signed. It is fair to say that her recollection is not particularly good. She obviously saw the booklet because she signed it in two places, but she did not recollect seeing it."
"However, I consider that that is not particularly surprising, especially if she did not read the booklet. She simply had a number of documents put before her by Mr Scott, and she signed them without either noticing what they were or appreciating what their effect or nature was.
... she struck me as an honest witness and nothing she said was internally inconsistent."
"... so far as misrepresentation is specifically concerned, Mr Scott did not intend to invest the whole of the £21,000, or even £20,000, in Impact, only £15,000."
"There was another misrepresentation, in my view, in that the claimant was told that the term of the mortgage would only be five years. It is clear that the term of the mortgage was fifteen years, it is clear that Mr Scott was aware of this, and it is clear that Mr Scott confirmed to the claimant that it would only be for five years. ...
There is also the fact that the claimant was told, and I accept that she was told, that `there was no way that she would lose her house', and that the shares which Mr Scott was to acquire in Impact could always be sold to repay the loan. Those sort of assurances given to anyone who was remotely financially sophisticated would, in my judgment, be of little, if any, assistance to that person in establishing a misrepresentation. However, to someone such as the claimant, who was wholly inexperienced in matters of this sort - she did not even know what was meant by the term `security', and had no idea what shares were - this sort of assurance would have given her confidence, and unjustified confidence, about her position."
"It is right to refer to the fact that, as I have already said, the claimant was introduced to solicitors, Forester and Forester. I am satisfied that the only purpose she was put in touch with those solicitors, and the only purpose for which she visited them, was to ensure that the title to Telcroft Close was sorted out following her husband's death. In due course she was registered as the sole proprietor. She was not put in touch with Forester and Forester by Mr Scott for the purpose of consulting them about the mortgage, nor, I am satisfied, was it suggested to her that she could or should consult them about the mortgage, save insofar as the suggestion was made by the defendant in the various places in the documentation to which I have referred."
"Bearing in mind these factors, it seems to me that viewed as a whole the claimant's case is made out on misrepresentation and undue influence. On undue influence, the various factors I have mentioned, taken together, satisfy me that, because of the relationship between the claimant and her daughter and son-in-law, because of her vulnerability immediately following her husband's death, because of her commercial ignorance and because of the misrepresentations made to her and because this arrangement was plainly to her manifest disadvantage in that she was putting up her house as security for money which was to be used and enjoyed by Mr Scott and, indirectly, to some extent at any rate, by Mrs Scott, alone, this was a transaction which was procured by undue influence."
"The degree of pressure exerted on her by sheer words and actions was comparatively slight."
"Nonetheless, it would be wrong to over-emphasise the pressure. On its own, the pressure in the present case would be too little to justify a finding of undue influence. It is the combination of factors to which I have referred which satisfy me that there was (to quote from the passage in Allcard v Skinner cited with approval in Etridge):
`Some improper conduct, some coercion from outside, some over-reaching, some form of cheating and, though not necessarily in every case, some personal advantage obtained.'
As to the misrepresentation, the combination of misrepresentations which I take into account in supporting the claim of undue influence also justify, taken on their own, the contention that the claimant entered into the mortgage in reliance on misrepresentation. ...
Taking all the misrepresentations I have identified together, I have reached the conclusion that she would not have entered into the mortgage if they had not been made. In those circumstances, I am satisfied that the claimant succeeds on both limbs of the first point."
"They were asking for a loan which required a rate of payment, which, if paid on time, was slightly less than the total monthly income of the claimant, or, if not paid on time, was substantially in excess of her total monthly income. They were also asking for a loan which could not be repaid until this lady, with a low income and uncharged property, who was not being asked to have the money paid to her, would be aged 71."
"... for the future in my judgment a creditor will have satisfied these requirements if it insists that the wife attend a private meeting (in the absence of the husband) with a representative of the creditor at which she is told of the extent of her liability as surety, warned of the risk she is running and urged to take independent legal advice."
"The only further substantial step required by law beyond that good practice is that the position should be explained by the bank to the wife in a personal interview. I regard this as being essential because a number of the decided cases show that written warnings are often not read and are sometimes intercepted by the husband. It does not seem to me that the requirement of a personal interview imposes such an additional administrative burden as to render the bank's position unworkable."