![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> McMullon v Secure the Bridge Ltd (Rev 1) [2015] EWCA Civ 884 (05 August 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/884.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 884 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM HUDDERSFIELD COUNTY COURT
SITTING AT BRADFORD
MR RECORDER CADWALLADER
2YK20474
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
and
MR JUSTICE HILDYARD
____________________
JULIE MCMULLON |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
SECURE THE BRIDGE LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Peter Fortune (instructed by B Legal Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10 June 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
See: Supplemental Judgment at the foot of this judgment
The Hon. Mr Justice Hildyard :
Statutory provisions and their interpretation
"(1) The court may make an order under section 140B in connection with a credit agreement if it determines that the relationship between the creditor and the debtor arising out of the agreement (or the agreement taken with any related agreement) is unfair to the debtor because of one or more of the following–
(a) any of the terms of the agreement or of any related agreement;
(b) the way in which the creditor has exercised or enforced any of his rights under the agreement or any related agreement;
(c) any other thing done (or not done) by, or on behalf of, the creditor (either before or after the making of the agreement or any related agreement).
(2) In deciding whether to make a determination under this section the court shall have regard to all matters it thinks relevant (including matters relating to the creditor and matters relating to the debtor).
(3) For the purposes of this section the court shall (except to the extent that it is not appropriate to do so) treat anything done (or not done) by, or on behalf of, or in relation to, an associate or a former associate of the creditor as if done (or not done) by, or on behalf of, or in relation to, the creditor.
(4) A determination may be made under this section in relation to a relationship notwithstanding that the relationship may have ended.
(5) An order under section 140B shall not be made in connection with a credit agreement which is an exempt agreement by virtue of section 16(6C)."
"An order under this section in connection with a credit agreement may do one or more of the following–
(a) require the creditor, or any associate or former associate of his, to repay (in whole or in part) any sum paid by the debtor or by a surety by virtue of the agreement or any related agreement (whether paid to the creditor, the associate or the former associate or to any other person);
(b) require the creditor, or any associate or former associate of his, to do or not to do (or to cease doing) anything specified in the order in connection with the agreement or any related agreement;
(c) reduce or discharge any sum payable by the debtor or by a surety by virtue of the agreement or any related agreement;
(d) direct the return to a surety of any property provided by him for the purposes of a security;
(e) otherwise set aside (in whole or in part) any duty imposed on the debtor or on a surety by virtue of the agreement or any related agreement;
(f) alter the terms of the agreement or any related agreement;
(g) direct accounts to be taken, or (in Scotland) an accounting to be made, between any persons."
(a) the terms of the agreement and any related agreement (see section 140A(1)(a));
(b) the way in which the creditor has exercised or enforced any of his rights under the agreement or any related agreement (see section 140A(1)(b)); and
(c) any other thing done (or not done) by, or on behalf of, the creditor (either before or after the making of the agreement or any related agreement (see section 140A(1)(c)).
"Section 140A is deliberately framed in wide terms with very little in the way of guidance about the criteria for its application, such as is to be found in other provisions of the Act conferring discretionary powers on the courts. It is not possible to state a precise or universal test for its application, which must depend on the court's judgment of all the relevant facts. Some general points may, however, be made. First, what must be unfair is the relationship between the debtor and the creditor. In a case like the present one, where the terms themselves are not intrinsically unfair, this will often be because the relationship is so one-sided as substantially to limit the debtor's ability to choose. Secondly, although the court is concerned with hardship to the debtor, subsection 140A(2) envisages that matters relating to the creditor or the debtor may also be relevant. There may be features of the transaction which operate harshly against the debtor but it does not necessarily follow that the relationship is unfair. These features may be required in order to protect what the court regards as a legitimate interest of the creditor. Thirdly, the alleged unfairness must arise from one of the three categories of cause listed at subparas (a) to (c). Fourthly, the great majority of relationships between commercial lenders and private borrowers are probably characterised by large differences of financial knowledge and expertise. It is an inherently unequal relationship. But it cannot have been Parliament's intention that the generality of such relationships should be liable to be reopened for that reason alone."
The Recorder's findings and the facts
"…having seen them both [that is, Mr Hopkins and Mrs McMullon] in the witness box, I prefer and accept Mr Hopkins' evidence that he took at least some time to go through it with her, and gave her the opportunity to take more time to consider it, but she was in a hurry to proceed and elected to sign it immediately."
"…in the circumstances in which she found herself, she must have been desperate to do everything that could be done to obtain a remortgage, or at least the bridging loan; and the evidence of Mr Hopkins, which was amply borne out by my observation of her in the witness box, was that she was a very determined person."
"there then followed a lengthy period during which Mr Hopkins, by his lights, attempted to assist; and Mrs McMullon, by her lights, complained bitterly of the way in which she had been treated."
Rationale of Recorder's approach
(a) in answer to the plea that Mr Hopkins, in purporting to act on her behalf in brokering the Credit Agreement, did not disclose to the Appellant his directorship of and 48% shareholding in the Claimant, found that she knew about both;
(b) in answer to the plea that Mr Hopkins gave the Appellant advice as a broker to take out the bridging loan upon the assurance that a long term mortgage would be available as the means of repaying it, found that Mr Hopkins was not giving advice as a broker but as a coach and experienced lender, and the advice was not wrong or misleading on the facts (at least as they were known to Mr Hopkins at the time);
(c) in answer to the plea that Mr Hopkins' advice to the Appellant that she had to reduce her 'credit file' by 50% to secure a long term mortgage was unwarranted since she did not need a bridging loan, held that it was the Appellant who was determined to obtain such a loan, and that again the advice was not wrong or misleading;
(d) in answer to the plea that Mr Hopkins told the Appellant to trust him, found that although she came to rely on him to a substantial degree, her trust was not misplaced;
(e) in answer to the plea that Mr Hopkins completed a mortgage application form on the Appellant's behalf which was materially incorrect, found that it was not Mr Hopkins but Mr Yardley who completed the form, and that the latter did so on information supplied by the Appellant herself;
(f) in answer to the plea that Mr Hopkins procured the Appellant's signature on the Credit Agreement by assuring her it was in standard form and gave her too little time to read it, found that the Credit Agreement was in standard form and that the Appellant did have adequate time to read it;
(g) rejected the allegation the document signed by the Appellant was not in the same form as that now relied on by the Claimant, and gave no indication that the bridging loan was to be secured, and found that the document she signed was in the same terms as that attached to the Particulars of Claim;
(h) rejected also the allegation that the Claimant, in order to gain interest on the bridging loan, neglected for 8 weeks to inform the Appellant of the fact that her application for a long term mortgage had been declined and that she would have to re-apply, and found (in effect) that there was never an occasion for the Claimant so to inform the Appellant since although numerous automated applications in principle were made (and declined) no formal application was made by or on her behalf or declined;
(i) as to the last allegation particularised to the effect that the Claimant by its director Mr Hopkins had made abusive telephone calls to the Appellant, the Recorder found that even though Mr Hopkins had (as he had admitted and apologised for) lost his temper on one occasion that was because the Appellant had unjustifiably accused him of twisting the truth and being dishonest: "it was not abuse but a loss of temper, and for understandable reasons".
"inappropriate for a bridging finance company to offer loans to persons in financial difficulties in circumstances in which such a relationship has come into existence as a result of extensive training and coaching provided by a key individual in the lending company via a different company of which he is also an owner".
"It is for the Claimant to prove that the relationship was not unfair. For the reasons given above, and despite my concern over the matters mentioned in [paragraph 34(c) above], I conclude that the relationship between the Claimant and the Defendant arising out of the agreement was not unfair to the Defendant. In coming to that conclusion I have taken into account the whole course of the evidence before me and the manner in which it was given. I have concluded it would be wrong to make an order under s.140B of the 1974 Act."
Appellant's case on appeal
(a) his 'Conflict of Interest' argument;
(b) his 'Affordability' argument; and
(c) his 'Fact Find argument'.
The Conflict of Interest argument
The Affordability argument
(a) the Recorder had, he submitted, overlooked Mr Hopkins' evidence under cross-examination to the effect (it was said) that he knew of Mrs McMullon's prior defaults on her credit card payments before the Credit Agreement was made, and erred in consequence in finding that neither Mr Hopkins nor Mr Yardley knew of such defaults until August (and thus after the loans provided for by the Credit Agreement were made);
(b) the Recorder, had, it was submitted, failed to take into account the deficiencies in the 'Fact Find', which included the fact that it was incomplete and the fact that an income of £1500 per month in addition to benefits payments had been added as an after-thought without any information or verification of its source; this failure, it was submitted, resulted in the Recorder accepting that the Respondent had proceeded on a false basis as to the Appellant's financial position for which she herself was responsible, whereas the truth was that Mr Hopkins must have known that he had to falsify any long term mortgage application by presenting her as having an income to service it which he knew she did not have;
(c) the Recorder had, it was also submitted, failed to take into account evidence given by Mr Hopkins under cross-examination admitting that he had told her that BM Solutions would agree to a mortgage if the credit card missed payments on her credit card (or 'blips') were errors (as she had assured him) and if her credit card debt was halved, and that this resulted in the Recorder discounting the Appellant's evidence that Mr Hopkins had assured her (and, in effect, induced her to proceed on the basis) that if she borrowed money from the Claimant a re-mortgage was "in the bag".
"Q, …….You will notice again the second missed payment is in June, which clearly must have shown you how much we were struggling financially and also why then would you tell me I need to take out a bridging loan in July?
A. Because you were adamant that these credit blips were an error and you were adamant and, in fact, I believe you told me that you had a dialogue with your bank and they had admitted they had made an error and, therefore, we were happy that these credit blips would be taken off and so that's why it was logical to take out the bridging finance."
"was not mentioned until later, and when it was, Mrs McMullon was making out that the second default was an error…"
The Fact Find
Conclusion on first main issue
Second main issue: validity of the provision for interest at 4% per month
"6. Fees
The fees payable for this loan total £2,279.00 plus legal fees. That sum is made up by the following fees:
(a) Bridging finance facility fee of 1.5% of the loan, namely £375.00 to be paid on entry; 1.5% of the loan, namely £375.00 to be paid per month for 3 months totalling £1,125.00; 1% of the loan, namely £250.00 to be paid on exit.
…
7. Interest
The monthly fee is payable on this loan during the 3 month closed bridging period. If funds are not repaid back to us within the3 months closed bridging period default interest of 4% per month of the amount outstanding will be chargeable. (Note: any part of a month will be charged at a full month's interest.)"
"93. The debtor under a regulated consumer credit agreement shall not be obliged to pay interest on sums which, in breach of the agreement, are unpaid by him at a rate:
(a) where the total charge for credit includes an item in respect of interest, exceeding that rate of interest, or
(b) in any other case, exceeding what would be the rate of total charge for credit if any items included in the total charge for credit by virtue of S 20 (2) were disregarded."
"173 (1) A term contained in a regulated agreement or linked transaction, or in any other agreement relating to an actual or prospective regulated agreement or linked transaction, is void if, and to the extent that, it is inconsistent with a provision for the protection of the debtor or hirer or his relative or any surety contained in this Act or in any regulation made under this Act."
"if, which is denied, the loan falls within the provisions of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, the Claimant will seek an order to enforce the repayment of the loan together with such interest as the Court may order."
The Claimant submits in the alternative that had the matter been addressed at trial, permission to amend would surely have been given, there being no relevant prejudice to the Appellants.
[NB: The content of paragraph 91 above has now been corrected by a supplemental judgment dated 20 November 2015.]
Overall conclusion
(1) I would dismiss the appeal on the first issue of fairness; but
(2) I would allow the appeal on the second issue (the interest payable), and I would substitute as the relevant rates of interest payable (a) 1.5% per month pre-judgment and (b) 8% per annum post-judgment.
Lord Justice Underhill
The President of the Family Division