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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Niru Battery Manufacturing Company & Anor v Milestone Trading Ltd & Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 487 (28 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/487.html Cite as: [2004] 1 CLC 882, [2004] 2 All ER (Comm) 289, [2004] 2 Lloyd's Rep 319, [2004] 2 LLR 319, [2004] EWCA Civ 487 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERICAL COURT
Mr Justice Moore-Bick
[2003] EWHC 1032 (Comm)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CLARKE
and
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
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(1) NIRU BATTERY MANUFACTURING COMPANY (2) BANK SEPAH IRAN |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) MILESTONE TRADING LIMITED (2) MARITIME FREIGHT SERVICES LIMITED (3) ALI AKHBAR MAHDAVI (4) CREDIT AGRICOLE INDOSUEZ (5) SGS UNITED KINGDOM LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss Geraldine Andrews QC and Miss Zoe O'Sullivan (instructed by Ashurst) for the Fifth Defendant/Respondent
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AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Clarke:
Introduction
The facts
"167. I set out the judge's findings of fact in this regard in paragraph 122 above. On those findings, especially those in paragraphs 120 and 121 of the judgment, Mr Francis did not know that a false bill of lading had been presented to Bank Sepah in order to obtain payment under the letter of credit but he knew that CAI had sold the warrants (and thus the lead) which formed the basis of the transaction and that the transaction could not therefore be completed. He therefore realised that Bank Sepah must have paid by reason of a mistake. Moreover, as the judge put it in paragraph 121 of his judgment, a moment's reflection would have led Mr Francis to appreciate that the reason given by Mr Mahdavi for wishing to retain the money did not justify the course he was asking the bank to take. In these circumstances the judge was entirely justified in saying at the end of paragraph 121:
"Thus, on the facts as Mr Francis understood them, nothing said by Mr Mahdavi actually undermined Bank Sepah's right to repayment of the money."
168. In these circumstances, having realised that Bank Sepah had paid by mistake, to my mind, good faith required Mr Francis to enquire of Bank Sepah before paying the money away in accordance with Mr Mahdavi's instructions and the judge was correct so to hold. As I read his judgment, the judge acquitted Mr Francis of dishonesty because he did not consciously act in disregard of the standards to be expected of the ordinary honest banker. The judge I think took the view that Mr Francis' state of mind was that CAI owed no duty to Bank Sepah, which could look after itself, but that CAI did owe a duty to its customer and in those circumstances paid the money away in accordance with Mr Mahdavi's instructions. The judge thought that that was misguided but not dishonest. As indicated earlier, it is my view that the judge was entitled to reach those conclusions.
169. On the other hand, the judge concluded that good faith required a person in Mr Francis' position who realised that the money had been paid by mistake to make enquiries of Bank Sepah to ascertain the position and not to pay the money away in the meantime. I have reached the clear conclusion that he was correct so to hold. This is, at the very least, an example of the case of the kind of bad faith expressly mentioned by Lord Goff in Lipkin Gorman and quoted in paragraph 146 above, namely where a person "has changed his position in bad faith, as where the defendant has paid away the money with knowledge of the facts entitling the plaintiff to restitution". Here, on the judge's findings of fact, when the money was paid away, Mr Francis (and thus CAI) knew the facts which entitled Bank Sepah to restitution, namely that it had paid under a mistake of fact.
170. In all these circumstances the judge was in my opinion correct to hold that CAI did not act in good faith in paying the money away and that it would be inequitable or unconscionable to deny Bank Sepah a right to restitution by repayment of the monies paid under the letter of credit. I would dismiss CAI's appeal under this head."
Subrogation
"If SGS were denied relief in the present case CAI would in my view be unjustly enriched at its expense, CAI was unjustly enriched by the receipt of the money from Bank Sepah and as a result became liable to restore it, CAI did not cease to be liable when it parted with the money: on the contrary, it remained liable because it had received a benefit which it was bound to restore. That liability merged in the judgment and came to an end only when, and by reason of the fact that, the judgment was satisfied in full by SGS. SGS was not responsible for CAI's decision to part with the money: that was the result of a combination of Mr Mahdavi's insistence that the bank follow his instructions and its own failure to act in good faith. CAI has been relieved of liability at the expense of SGS and as a party liable to make restitution on the grounds of unjust enrichment I do not think that in relation to SGS it can be treated as if it did not receive the benefit on which its liability was based, any more than it could in relation to Niru."
"I think it should be recognised that one is here concerned with a restitutionary remedy and that the appropriate questions are therefore, first, whether the defendant would be enriched at the plaintiff's expense; secondly, whether such enrichment would be unjust; and thirdly, whether there are nevertheless reasons of policy for denying a remedy."
I return to the examples which I identified above with that general approach in mind.
"Their Lordships are, however, most reluctant to recognise the propriety of introducing the concept of relative fault into this branch of the common law, and indeed decline to do so. They regard good faith on the part of the recipient as a sufficient requirement in this context."
Lord Hoffmann expressed a strong view to the same effect in the Banque Financière case at page 235E-G.
"Looking at the matter generally, I have no doubt that justice requires that a person, who (as a result of some mistake which it becomes evident has been made in the execution of an agreed bargain) has a benefit or the right to a benefit for which he knows that he has not bargained or paid, should reimburse the value of that benefit to the other party if it is readily returnable without substantial difficulty or detriment and he chooses to retain it (or give it away to a third party) rather than to re-transfer it on request. Even if realisable benefit alone is not generally sufficient, the law should recognise, as a distinct category of enrichment, cases where a benefit is readily returnable. A person who receives another's chattel must either return it or pay damages, commonly measured by reference to its value. …. However, Mr McDonald's insistence on keeping the mark and the absence of any obvious means of compelling its re-transfer are reasons for analysing this case in terms of unjust enrichment. Mr McDonald knew that he had not bargained or paid for the mark. The mark or its benefit was in practice easily returnable. If Mr McDonald chose to keep it, then I see every reason for treating him as benefited."
"47. … The real damage lies in the [Cressmans'] continuing deprivation of the mark or its value, which was still the result of Coys' breach, but was, much more directly, the result of Mr McDonald's determination to retain and refusal to re-transfer the mark.
48. On the hypothesis on which we must approach this part of the appeal, it was therefore open to the judge to treat both parties as causally responsible for the same damage. Bearing in mind that it is Mr McDonald who received the benefit of the mark, and that the whole proceedings would have been unnecessary had he re-transferred the mark to the estate's order as he should have done, the judge's conclusion that Coys should recover 100% contribution from him appears to me unassailable in this court."
"It may be that in a broad sense SGS and CAI were equally to blame for the loss suffered by Niru, but it does not follow that there is no distinction to be drawn between them in terms of the benefit they received. In these circumstances I do not feel constrained by the views I expressed in my final judgment to hold that consideration of justice and equity preclude relief by way of subrogation in this case."
Mr Bloch relies upon the judge's observation that it may be that in a broad sense SGS and CAI were equally to blame as being inconsistent with the conclusion that CAI should bear 100 per cent of the loss. However, as I read the judgment as a whole, the judge was saying that when all the circumstances are taken into account, a solution which left CAI bearing the whole of the loss was a just result. In any event, I have reached the conclusion that that is indeed the just solution.
"are in no way based on contract and appear to defeat classification except as an empirical remedy to prevent a particular kind of unjust enrichment.
This makes particularly perilous any attempt to rely upon analogy to justify applying one set of circumstances which would otherwise result in unjust enrichment a remedy of subrogation which has been held to be available for that purpose in another and different set of circumstances."
"Subrogation, therefore, is a remedy not a cause of action … It is available in a wide variety of different factual situations in which it is required in order to reverse the defendant's unjust enrichment. Equity lawyers speak of a right of subrogation or of an equity of subrogation, but this merely reflects the fact that it is not a remedy which the court has a general discretion to impose whenever it thinks it just to do so. The equity arises from the conduct of the parties on well-settled principles and in defined circumstances which make it unconscionable for the defendant to deny the proprietary interest claimed by the plaintiff."
"subrogation is essentially a remedy, which is fashioned to the facts of the particular case and which is granted in order to prevent the defendant's unjust enrichment."
Lord Hutton also referred with approval to parts of the passages from the Orakpo case and Boscawen v Bajwa which I have quoted above.
Recoupment
"Where the plaintiff has been compelled by law to pay, or, being compellable by law, has paid, money which the defendant was ultimately liable to pay, so that the latter obtains the benefit of the payment by the discharge of his liability: under such circumstances the defendant is held indebted to the plaintiff in the account".
"In general, anybody who has under compulsion of law made a payment whereby he has discharged the primary liability of another is entitled to be reimbursed by that other. …
To succeed in his claim for recoupment, the plaintiff must satisfy certain conditions. He must show:
(1) that he was compelled, or was compellable, by law to make the payment;
(2) that he did not officiously expose himself to the liability to make the payment; and
(3) that his payment discharged a liability of the defendant."
"59. In the present case the satisfaction of the judgment by SGS discharged CAI's liability under the judgment, but I do not think that of itself can be enough since the judgment was simply the means by which SGS was compelled to pay. The question whether SGS was compelled to discharge a liability that rested primarily on CAI is one that can only be answered by reference to the underlying rights and liabilities.
60. The underlying liabilities of SGS and CAI were, however, quite different in nature: SGS incurred liability in tort and CAI liability in restitution. I do not think that the payment by SGS of damages for negligence would have discharged CAI's liability to restore the benefit it had received any more than the payment by Esso to the crofters in The 'Esso Bernicia' discharged the liability of Hall Russell. In those circumstances Niru would have been unjustly enriched for the reasons explained by Lord Goff in that case and SGS would have been subrogated to its claim against CAI. The fact that SGS has been sued to judgment does not in my view alter the position; that is simply the means by which SGS has been compelled to satisfy its own liability to Niru. For these reasons I do not think that the present case can be brought within the principles of recoupment."
Contribution
"1(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section any person liable in respect of any damage suffered by another person may recover contribution from any other person liable in respect of the same damage (whether jointly with him or otherwise).
…
6(1) A person is liable in respect of any damage for the purposes of this Act if the person who suffered it …. is entitled to recover compensation from him in respect of that damage (whatever the legal basis of his liability, whether tort, breach of contract, breach of trust or otherwise)."
Postscript
CONCLUSION
Lord Justice Sedley
Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss P