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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Thames Valley Housing Association Ltd & Ors v Elegant Homes (Guernsey) Ltd & Ors [2009] EWHC 2647 (Ch) (27 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/2647.html Cite as: [2010] 1 P & CR DG15, [2010] 2 EG 86, [2009] 44 EG 209, [2009] EWHC 2647 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THAMES VALLEY HOUSING ASSOCIATION LIMITED THAMES VALLEY CHARITABLE HOUSING ASSOCIATION LIMITED ANDERSONS SOLICITORS (a firm) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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ELEGANT HOMES (GUERNSEY) LIMITED WILLMETT SOLICITORS (a firm) BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC |
Defendants |
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MR. D. HALPERN Q.C. (instructed by Barlow Lyde Gilbert LLP) for the Second Defendant.
MR. J. TAYLOR (instructed by Messrs. Ahmed & Co) for the First Defendant.
Hearing date: 7th October 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
The facts
"1.1 A first and only debenture from the Borrower.
1.2 A first and only legal charge over the [Bray] Property."
A debenture was already in place. It was dated 20th May 2005 and was in the familiar form – a fixed charge on all freehold and similar properties and a floating charge on a lot of other assets. I do not need to set out its provisions. A fixed charge was given over the Bray property on 1st June 2007; it secured all monies due from Elegant to the Bank. I do not need to set out any of the provisions of that document either. The important point to note about both of them is a negative – none of them contained any conceivable reference which would support the notion that the Bank would be obliged to release any particular part of the Bray property on payment of anything less than the whole of the outstanding debts due from Elegant to the Bank. The structure as it appears from those documents, and without prejudging the validity of a submission made by Mr Halpern, was a familiar one. The Bank was prepared to lend (and did lend) the costs of buying the land and a percentage of the development costs. It apparently expected to be paid piecemeal by sales of the plots, and no doubt would be highly likely to accept repayment in that manner because it was hardly likely that it would be repaid in any other way. The borrower would wish to pay in that manner because it was from sales of individual plots that it was going to get its money in respect of the development. In other words, that particular repayment mechanism seems, on the face of the contractual documents, to be a matter of commercial practicality rather than legal entitlement, though the documents do contain provisions which forbid sales of any of the properties without the Bank's consent. The Bank would be highly likely to consent to proper sales because, as I have observed, it was not going to be repaid in any other way short of full scale security enforcement.
(a) Willmetts were asked (in requisition 6.1): 'Please list the mortgage or charges secured on the property which you undertake to redeem or discharge to the extent that they relate to the property on or before completion…'. In response, Willmetts stated 'We undertake only in respect of the charge in favour of Bank of Scotland plc dated 1 June 2007 and registered on 16 January 2008…'
(b) Willmetts were asked (in requisition 6.2): 'Do you undertake to redeem or discharge the mortgages and charges listed in reply to 6.1 on completion and to send us form DS1, DS3, the receipted charge(s) or confirmation that notice of release or discharge in electronic form has been given to the Land Registry as soon as you receive them'. Willmetts gave this undertaking by responding 'Confirmed'.
(c) The following undertaking was given pursuant to the Code: '[Willmetts] undertake (i) to have the seller's authority to receive the purchase money on completion; and (ii) on completion to have the authority of the proprietor of each mortgage or charge specified under paragraph 3 [which included the Bank's charge] to receive the sum intended to repay it.'
(d) They also gave this undertaking, via the Code: 'Willmetts undertake….(ii) to redeem or obtain discharge for every mortgage or charge so far as it relates to the property specified under paragraph 3 which has not already been redeemed or discharged'.
Willmetts accepts that these undertakings were given.
The respective cases of the parties
Should the undertaking be enforced at this stage?
"4. Quite simply it was standard practice for all BOS advances for construction/development sites to require bullet repayments – i.e. as and when a property on the site was sold, the net proceeds of that sale would be immediately utilised in the direct reduction of the outstanding liability. As can be seen from the documents contained in Exhibit DS1 and annexed to this statement, BOS' standard terms and conditions provide for bullet repayments."
Exhibit DS1 is in fact the internal Bank document to which I have already referred. It does not contain standard Bank conditions. It refers to "standard conditions precedent to draw down of the land loan" and merely sets out what the Bank commonly requires, but it does not amount to standard conditions in documents operating as between the Bank and its customer. What it does indicate, not surprisingly, is that the Bank would expect to be repaid from those bullet repayments.
"Prima facie, it is open to Mr Lincoln to obtain that lease by paying off the first mortgage, in which case he would be entitled to require the first mortgagee to hand over the lease to him and he could then hand over the lease in turn to the Bank. There might, of course, be circumstances in which it would be difficult or impossible for him to achieve that result, but there is no evidence before me to show that any such difficulty or impossibility exists, and in the absence of any evidence it seems to me that I ought to proceed on the basis that Mr Lincoln is able to perform this undertaking."
"Despite the fact that the amount demanded here is approximately double the value of Plot 3, I accept Mr Pay's submissions in this regard. Mr Kenny is entitled to demand the full sum due, and Lucas should be taken to have contemplated that that might well be the case, especially in the light of the fact that their client was developing the Site as a whole. In this regard, I also take into account the extract from the Solicitors' Code of Conduct and the Guide to it, to which I was referred. Such a demand is not therefore, something which can be categorised as wholly unreasonable or outside Lucas' contemplation."
That can be said to apply in the present case.
Conclusions
i) The undertakings given by Willmetts were given and broken.ii) There is no serious issue as to the entitlement of the Bank to require the sum which it has in fact demanded as the price of discharging the charge over the nine plots.
iii) This Court should therefore enforce the undertakings given by Willmetts.
iv) The order for enforcement will be one which requires Willmetts to comply with their undertaking and procure the discharge of the nine plots from the Bank's charge.