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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Royal Bank of Scotland Plc v Luwum (Rev 1) [2008] EWCA Civ 648 (15 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/648.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 648 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE NOTTINGHAM COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE INGLIS)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
____________________
ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC |
Respondent/Claimant |
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- and - |
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LUWUM |
Appellant/Defendant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr S Eyre (instructed by Shakespeare Putsman LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer:
The background facts
"If you do not make a satisfactory proposal for repayment within 28 days from the date of this letter, we may also provide credit reference agencies with details of the total amount of outstanding debt. …
You must now contact my colleague David Le Page directly on [a given number, the times when lines were open also being given] to discuss how you propose to take this situation forward.
Failure to contact us may also result in your property being repossessed and should we not hear from you within 28 days from the date of this letter, we will arrange to pass your details to the Royal Bank of Scotland Plc who will progress this relationship."
"We refer to letters sent to you by the One account dated 12 January 2006 regarding the arrears on the above account.
Responsibility for collection of the arrears has been passed to this Department due to the problems previously outlined.
The borrowing with the One account has not been repaid in accordance with agreed arrangements. As a result the position has now been passed for litigation. Shakespeares solicitors have been instructed to apply to the courts for a Possession Order on the Bank's behalf, as the borrowing is secured by a First Legal Charge over the property, 91 Holgate Road, Nottingham.
Please note that the costs of the Legal Proceedings will be added to your debt.
We strongly recommend that you seek advice as soon as possible. …
Please can you give this matter your urgent attention. The contact number for the department is [and it was given] and the contact is John Carter."
The proceedings
"I phoned and had a detailed ways forward conversation with one of the staff members (whom I can not recall name). The following resolutions were reached: (a) I agreed with the Bank for me to return the cheque books and bank cards; (b) We frost the increases on the facility level were suspended till my financial situations have improved; (c) I informed the bank that having been unemployed for over eighteen months I am entitle for housing benefit from the social security department and have applied to them to make payment towards my accommodation; (d) In addition to that I also inform the bank that my family and friends had pledged their support to make regular payment to the account to with immediate effects.
The bank agreed on my proposal and set the account to be reviewed on a later date.
These agreed ways forward invalided the demand made by the bank for full repayment on their letter dated 12th January 2006 and also the claim in the second part of the statement 2 made in article 8 by the claimant's solicitor which state 'however, that limit is no longer applicable'. In addition this claim is inaccurate as the limit was frozen, not withdrawn.
I continued making payments to the account as later agreed with the bank and brought the account balance within the facility level as agreed and continued to maintain it within the agreed limit.
Having invalided their demand for full repayment by agreeing with my proposal detailed above and after I brought the facility within its agreed limit the bank went behind my back without any warning and issue the proceedings against me.
Nevertheless, on receipt of the court warrant issued, I contacted the Bank with that regards but was informed that unless I agree to grantee a monthly repayment of over £500 the court process will not be stopped.
I reminded the bank of the above mentioned new arrangement to bring the facility within its agreed limit, which I did; the nature of the account sole to me and pleaded with them on the bases that the facility is within it agreed limit and could only grantee every thing legally possible to ensure the balance remains within limit.
The bank when ahead and brought up the case to court when the agreed facility is already within its limits."
"ii) John Carter on behalf of The Royal Bank of Scotland abused his position by:
- Contacting me before the end of the agreed three months period to bring the account within its agreed limit. Hence Neglecting/Breaking the Banking Code Article 14 etc.
- Dishonestly threatening me with a court order before the end of the agreed three months period. …"
"c) I took the option …, contacted David Le Page within 28 days from the date the letter was written and discussed the followings:
i) I asked him to verify if the DWP is making enough payment into the account. He said no.
ii) I asked why I was not informed about this earlier, although he rightfully replied; it is my responsibility to ensure that payment is being made into the account. The court should note that having:
- Trusted the agreement that DWP made as detailed under Article 3: a), I did not see the need to continue phoning their office for the payment.
- Communicated the DWP agreement to the one account.
- Neither the DWP nor the one account customer service department who did not, yet they could have informed me about the delayed payment to the account before the letter of 12th Jan 2006 was issued. Till this point in time, I did not know any better.
iii) I said I do not want my home to be repossessed by the bank and asked him what I can do. He said I have to make a satisfactory proposal to ensure that the credit limit is reduced within the agreed limit.
iv) Although the information mentioned her under Article 3:c ii) was withheld from me by both the one account and DWP, amongst many think discussed and agreed upon, I proposed that:
- I will make follow up payment I am entitled to from the DWP.
- I will contact families and friends to help make paying to the account.
- I requested him to give me five months to bring the account back to the agreed limit.
v) David Le Page agreed on the first two part of the proposals but said he can only offer me a maximum period of three months to bring the account within the agreed facility limit, which I agreed and David Le Page added, the account would be under management pending review after three months. …
4 a) Late in February 2006, I received a letter dated the 23rd February 2006 from customer service manager of The Royal Bank of Scotland ….
b) I phoned the contact number indicated in the letter and spoke with John Carter. After confirm that he is aware and responsible for the letter, we discussed the following:
i) I highlighted to John that I had telephone conversation with David Le Page, pointing out that I do not want the case to go to court and agreed with David Le Page that the account would be reviewed in three months from the date of one account letter dated the 12th Jan 2006.
ii) John said, since my telephone conversation with David, no significant payment had been made to the account and he had no option but to take action.
iii) I pleaded with John and said, I had already obtained agreement of support from families and friends within the follow months he will see payment to the account while waiting for the DWP to process my payment and requested him to withdraw the case from the appointed solicitor.
iv) Having known my concern of NOT wanting the case to go to court AS detailed under Article 4:b)-i), John said, he can only withdraw the case from the solicitor if I agree to change my financial arrangement from flexible credit limited to a fixed monthly repayment mortgage.
v) I disagreed with John Carter on principle and matters ended unresolved. …
5 a) I kept the original agreed proposal I made to David Le Page, continued to make payment into the account and brought the account to the agreed limit as supported by the statement of the Claimant's solicitor detailed here under Article 1:e). …"
"3. I continued with the payment as proposed, despite the fact that I was contacted by the bank before the end of the agreed period for the account to be reviewed and having disagreed with John Carter in principle during the subsequent telephone conversation as detailed in my Defend statement, John on behalf of the Royal Bank of Scotland choose to ignore the satisfactory proposal in place, which superseded the demand letter of the 12th Jan 2006.
4. As it is shown in the account history, on the 2nd March 2006 the account balance was brought down to within the agreed facility of under £72,000, but the Royal Bank of Scotland went ahead to issue legal proceedings to the court on 16 April 2006, regardless of my advice to John and fact the account was already brought to it agreed facility. This carefully planed act of the bank to prematurely issue legal proceedings with the intentions to deprive me off my home and facility arrangement rather than reviewing the account as previously agreed, courses me some confusions of as to whether or not to continue with the payment in the months of May and June, but made a decision to continue with the payment to the account regardless of all those harassment."
"5. It is the case that the One Account will on occasion agree to defer action for a limited period following formal demand to allow the customer an opportunity to bring his or her account balance back within the previously agreed limit. However, this will be subject [to] their maintaining payments at the minimum level required by the One Account thereafter. The formal demand is not 'withdrawn' in those circumstances and this is not, therefore, something that would have been agreed with the Defendant, as I understand he has suggested. Action is merely suspended while the customer's account is monitored to ensure the agreed terms are adhered to, and will continue should there being any default in maintaining the required payments of the previously agreed limit and is again exceeded.
6. An account transaction history covering the period 2 February 2006 to 11 July 2006 is now [exhibited]. It is noted that the Defendant made a payment of £1,550 on 2 March 2006, which reduced the Account balance below £72,000.00. However, the previously agreed limit was again exceeded the following month. As such action would have been taken at that stage irrespective of any earlier agreement with the Defendant."
The judge's decision.
"the narrow question, Mr Luwum, of what if any agreement you reached with Mr Le Page, because that is the only thing standing between you and an outright order for possession."
"31. … That would have been an important document, simply indicating whether or not the account had been accessed by some member of staff, because it is inconceivable that a conversation such as Mr Luwum advances would have taken place without the person from the bank getting up on the screen the position and history of the account since no doubt they deal with many hundreds of accounts each. So a bare assertion by Mr Le Page, who does not turn up and does not evidence his assertion by a print-out, is not helpful to his case."
"36. On balance, I think that Mr Luwum did have a conversation with someone at the bank after 12 January. It would have been surprising in fact if he did not do so if, as was the case, he was then going to make arrangements to incur liabilities to other people, his ex-girlfriend, relatives and friends without ever talking to the bank at all. But I am not satisfied that he reached an agreement or understanding that goes the distance of the case as is has now developed. In particular, I do not find that there was any question of the position being reversed in any circumstances as if the letter of 12th January had not been written at all. That would have been a most surprising thing for the bank ever to agree in any circumstances. It would be a very uncertain and complex thing for them to do and would be inconsistent with what might be expected. The truth is that once that letter had been written the legal position changed radically. It is plain -- and there is scope for misunderstanding of this; there is scope also, I think, for unfairness in this -- it is plain that armed with the right to demand the full amount and having made the demand, the bank can bring proceedings for possession which they can enforce, and there is no effective discretion, but it is right that they can exercise forbearance, forbearance that may last for quite a number of years, so that consistently with the letter they wrote in October and discussed before District Judge Reeson they would be prepared to forbear in enforcing any order of possession providing monthly payments were kept up that were satisfactory to them. That would over time reduce the debt. As Mr Luwum has complained, that would in fact have the effect of reducing the payment regime to one that he had not originally signed up to, but that reflects the changed conditions in which he found himself after 12th January.
37. I do not find that the conversation which on balance I find he had with the member of staff at the bank went any further than this, that if he was to make payments and get the indebtedness down to below £72,000 the bank would consider the position to keep the matter under review. I do not regard them as having given away by any representations when he then reacted to any legal rights that they had. Indeed, if the conversation had been construed that they had done so, the letter of 23rd February before which only £260 had been paid would have disabused Mr Luwum of the fact. Moreover, at the end of the three-month period and for a time thereafter the £72,000 figure had in any event been exceeded. I do not think there was anything about the conversation that was as firm and clear and crystallized as Mr Luwum now has come to assert. Although I have found that he had some conversation, I do not regard the bank as binding themselves not to take legal proceedings when and if they chose to do so. It was simply an indication that they would consider the position as it went along and would decide what to do later. As I say, there may have been an element of stringing the customer along, getting him to make payments that in the end would do him no good. Indeed, for the time that these proceedings had been running from shortly after the order made by District Judge Smith, the account has been serviced to the extent of keeping the indebtedness below £72,000. But as to whether the bank in a telephone conversation with Mr Luwum compromised their legal rights to enforce the mortgage, the answer I give in my judgment on the facts is no, they did not."
The appeal.
Lord Justice Rix:
Sir Robert Morritt:
Order: Appeal allowed