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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> National Westminster Bank Plc v Rushmer & Anor [2010] EWHC 554 (Ch) (19 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/554.html Cite as: [2010] Fam Law 590, [2010] EWHC 554 (Ch), [2010] 2 FLR 362 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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NATIONAL WESTMINSTER BANK PLC |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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DUNCAN DAVID BRUCE RUSHMER FIONA JANE RUSHMER |
Defendant Defendant/ Appellant |
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David Hunt Q.C. (instructed by Geoffrey Parker Bourne Ltd) for the Second Defendant/Appellant.
The First Defendant appeared in person.
Hearing date: 4 March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ARNOLD :
Introduction
Background
"(a) the intentions of the person or persons (if any) who created the trust,
(b) the purposes for which the property subject to the trust is held,
(c) the welfare of any minor who occupies or might reasonably be expected to occupy any land subject to the trust as his home, and
(d) the interests of any secured creditor of any beneficiary."
"14. Mr Rushmer feels very strongly about the events that have occurred because he ascribed the failure of his company to faulty advice from the accountants, and he also considered that there had been maladministration by the administrators who were appointed. He pointed to an apparent gap of some £100,000 in their [unclear].
15. He has issued a claim against the accountants. Manches & Co act for him, a very well-known London firm, who have instructed leading and junior counsel, both of whom signed particulars of claim. That claim has got to the stage of allocation, questionnaires having been put in. They have a threat of summary judgment application by the defendants themselves, but there is going to be mediation, or it is strongly hoped that there is going to be mediation in their case.
16. Although, unfortunately, the agreement is not in evidence, Mr Rushmer tells me that that litigation is being undertaken under a conditional fee agreement, with the lawyers getting no payment at all except on success. If that is right, it does suggest that the lawyers must consider that the case has at least a reasonable prospect of success and it cannot be regarded as a merely speculative claim. The same would go for a claim not yet issued against the administrators where the pre-action protocol letters had just been written, and the time has expired (I think I am right in saying) and is ready for issue. Again, Manches and the same team of counsel are acting on a CFA.
17. Therefore, it is the case, it seems to me, that there is a real prospect of monies, substantial monies, coming in in the future which may in fact pay off the bank in full. On the other hand, it is obvious that litigation is always chancy and one cannot possibly rely on either of the claims (the existing one or the one about to be issued) going to succeed and produce a great deal of money for the bank. But there is, it seems to me, a reasonable chance that monies to pay off the bank will be derived in that way.
18. But it does not seem to me in general that it could be right to expect the bank to await the outcome of that litigation unless it gets some return on its money in the meanwhile. If the amount of the claim can be frozen so that the amount owing to the bank does not keep increasing because the interest is accruing on it, then it would, it seems to me, be right to suspend the order to await events to see what happens in the litigation. To leave the position in that way would require Mrs Rushmer to make payments to the bank so to speak in lieu of rent of their half share. What has been canvassed before me are payments of 8% on the value of Mr Rushmer's half share. The money for those proceeds would have to come, presumably, out of Mrs Rushmer's half share of the proceeds of the sale of the London house when that is sold.
19. I will suspend the order if Mrs Rushmer does decide to make those payments. If those payments are made, I feel uncertain as to how long I should make the suspension for, I think it should be for a fixed period although, of course, there will be the opportunity to apply to extend that period depending on how future events turn out. I think because it is unlikely that all those will be [unclear] that the litigation, unless accepted, can be completed in a year, but I will suspend the order until two years or the earlier conclusion of the litigation."
"That if the Second Defendant pays (such payments not to be made out of the assets of the First Defendant) to the Claimant the sum of £2,666.67 by 4 p.m. on the 17th day of each calendar month beginning with 17th October 2007, paragraphs (2) to (5) and (7) and (8) of this Order shall not take effect until the earlier of
(i) 4 p.m. on 17th July 2009; and
(ii) 14 days after the later of:
(a) the conclusion howsoever resolved of Claim No. HQ07X01187; and
(b) the conclusion howsoever resolved of the claim intended to be issued by the First Defendant against the former administrators of Audio Visual Asset Management Limited provided that the First Defendant diligently pursues the said claim."
The remainder of the Order was in fairly conventional form.
"62. Mr Rushmer's primary case, that he received draft accounts from Mr Smith in May 2002 and received advice from him at a meeting, fails because I have found that there were then no draft accounts, and there was no meeting and no advice.
63. Mr Rushmer has a fall back position that he did on any view receive negligently overstated accounts which showed the company to be in a very much better position than it actually was, and had he not received those accounts first in draft in mid July 2002 and in final form in September 2002, he would have taken a different course with AVAM: he would not have 'grown' the company but would have wound it down with the outcome that the liability on his guarantee would have been avoided or much reduced.
….
66. I therefore conclude that Mr Rushmer did not rely on the figures produced by Mr Smith in the 2001/2 accounts to decide what he should do with AVAM. I have already pointed out that, contrary to his evidence, he did not grow the company. There was an investment of £125,000 in September 2002 that was not an investment made on the strength of Mr Smith's accounts.
….
68. The claim against Mr Smith therefore fails because I find that Mr Rushmer did not rely on Mr Smith's accounts as he said that he did. I have also found that no representations going beyond that constituted by the provision of the accounts was made."
"Because there is a dispute about what was said at the meeting, I must begin by saying something about Mr Rushmer and Mr Smith as witnesses. I mention that they were the only witnesses whom I heard as to the facts. There were a number of matters which arose in the course of Mr Rushmer's evidence which persuaded me that I should be cautious before accepting what he said on matters of dispute…. I have made up my own mind of the truthfulness of Mr Rushmer as a witness, but I record that in other litigation in which Mr Rushmer was a defendant the Court of Appeal referred to his 'lack of credibility' and 'obstructive dishonesty': see Dickinson v Rushmer t/a FJ Associates 14 February 2000."
"I should explain that because of a restriction on funds, my husband was unable to proceed with both actions at the same time and indeed received advice from lawyers, more specifically leading counsel, to pursue the claim against Mr Smith initially rather than trying to conduct both actions together."
The applications to the Master
"(i) 4 p.m. on 17th June 2011;
(ii) 14 days after the conclusion howsoever resolved of the claim intended to be issued by the second defendant against the former administrators of Audio Visual Asset Management Limited provided that the second defendant diligently pursued the said claim. "
The judgment under appeal
"I was, it now appears, misinformed by Mr Rushmer as to the CFA. Although the solicitors were acting under a CFA, counsel were not. Furthermore, Manches ceased to act for Mr Rushmer before the trial of the Smith action, being replaced by Geoffrey Parker Bourne, the firm which is acting for Mrs Rushmer on the current application. I was also misinformed as to the imminence of the action against the administrators, which was not in fact about to be issued. It is now said that Mr Rushmer was advised that this action should be kept on hold until after the conclusion of the other action. Initially Mrs Rushmer's application was for a further two years extension of the suspension of the order for sale and making no monthly payments at all during those two years. That was and is, in my view, a plainly unreasonable application and I infer that Mrs Rushmer subsequently advice to that effect, because very shortly before the hearing she made a seventh witness statement in which she proposed that she would start making monthly payments again in July from a repayment of a loan which was due for repayment then, although she was only offering to make payments at the reduced rate of £1,000 a month. However, I was informed by the Bank's solicitors in a letter dated 22 September that Mrs Rushmer had made no further payment to the Bank, so that apparently Mrs Rushmer's application had reverted to being one to have a further two years' grace while making no payment at all to the Bank."
"This illustrates the complete lack of reality which Mrs Rushmer has. All she says about the failure of Mr Rushmer's claim is 'unfortunately my husband failed in the claim before the court and costs were awarded against him'. The claim against Mr Smith failed because the allegation by Mr Rushmer that he relied on Mr Smith's figures was false. Therefore the claim was bound to fail because it was based on untruthful statements by Mr Rushmer and any intent to litigate on it is equally bound to fail."
"That 'restriction on funds' brings out the false basis on which I was persuaded to make my earlier order for suspension of the order for sale. This was made on the basis that the lawyers would only have to be paid if the claim succeeded, whereas counsel would have required paying if the claim against the administrators was to be started, and they did require payment in the claim against Mr Smith. Their fees were apparently paid by Mrs Rushmer out of her share of the proceeds of the sale of the Winery."
"Whether or not there are any real prospects of success in a claim which has deliberately not been prosecuted for this length of time, I am not in a position to judge. I have seen no opinion or advice from counsel or solicitors that the claim is a good one or estimating the sum which would be recoverable in it. The fact that the claim against the administrators was kept on hold in favour of pursuing the claim against Mr Smith suggests that the claim against Mr Smith was seen as the stronger claim. Plainly if the claim relies to any extent on Mr Rushmer's evidence there is a grave weakness in it, because given the past history of his litigation, no reliance at all can be placed on anything said by Mr Rushmer. I am therefore deeply sceptical about any prospect of successful litigation."
"Even if it were shown that there were possible claims that could be pursued with some prospect of success, that would not in my view justify a further postponement of the sale. What really matters, it seems to me, is that Mr Rushmer and Mrs Rushmer have deliberately not instituted any such proceedings, although one of the grounds of the two year suspension of the possession order was Mr Rushmer's assertion that the issue of these proceedings was imminent, and the stay was conditional on the proceedings being pursued diligently. The two years was fixed on the basis that litigation should be at an end then. Admittedly it was contemplated that an extension of time might be necessary. Obviously, if the claim had been heard by the cut off date of 14th July but judgment had been reserved, an extension of time until after delivery of judgment would be granted. And if, although the claim had not got to trial, the trial was imminent, again an extension might well have been granted. But here absolutely nothing has been done, and that decision to do nothing was quite deliberate. In my judgment there can be no justification for extending time in those circumstances, leaving the bank out of its money for a further two years with interest continuing to run and with no prospects of the bank ever recovering that further interest."
"Mrs Rushmer has not been prepared to use her own money in pursuing further litigation, and it would be thoroughly imprudent of her to spend any money on further litigation, the strong likelihood that this would be throwing good money after bad. Her assertion that the Bank should finance this speculative realisation rather than realising its security over Mr Rushmer's share in the Surrey house is fanciful."
"Of course with hindsight one can see that the Bank would have done better to accept Mrs Rushmer's offer of £175,000 (assuming Mrs Rushmer would have stood by it and raised the money). But that fact does not begin to show that the Bank acted improperly in declining to accept Mrs Rushmer's offer without having first tested the market. The principle that the Bank was entitled to take that position had indeed been accepted by the Master and the judge when making the order for sale and refusing permission to appeal. Because there had been an earlier offer by Mrs Rushmer which she submitted the Bank should accept without testing the market. In any event if Mrs Rushmer had wanted to buy the Winery she was free to make an offer to the Bank at the time of its sale but she made no further effort to buy it between the February 2007 offer and the sale."
"She must be able to obtain a substantial mortgage given that she would be putting down say £250,000 of her own money in the purchase. Nor, in my view, can she rely on the fact that she had spent nearly all of her share of the proceeds of sale of The Winery as a reason for varying the order for sale. On these figures I can see no reason to suppose that Mrs Rushmer would be unable to buy an adequate three bedroom replacement house for herself and her family, though of course it would be much smaller and a very much less desirable house than Little Orchard. Mrs Rushmer has in any case not provided full and frank information about her finances which it was incumbent on her to do if she wished to argue that the purchase of a replacement home was beyond her capacity."
He went on to say that he did not accept that the bank should wait until the market improved before selling the house for its own sake as well as for Mrs Rushmer's. It was entirely speculative whether and if so by how much property prices would increase over the next two years. Even if one assumed a fall in the value of a third, a sale would still produce £175,000 for the bank. A sum of that size justified a sale even though it was a relatively small proportion of the debt.
First ground of appeal
"We refer to the hearing before Master Moncaster on 17th June 2009 when evidence was put before the Court that Mrs Rushmer had failed to comply with the order dated 17th July 2007 and in particular had failed to make any payments to the claimant after October 2008.
At the hearing on 17th June 2009, the matter was adjourned for judgment to be delivered. We can confirm that since that date, Mrs Rushmer has made no payment to the claimant, whether in relation to the sums she should have paid in accordance with the order dated 17th July 2007 or in relation to her current occupation of the Property."
This letter neither purported on its face to be, nor was in fact, copied to the solicitors acting for Mrs Rushmer.
Second ground of appeal
"Until disclosure herein, the following is the best information the Applicant can give. In breach of the statutory obligation, the First and Second Respondents:
(a) failed to properly investigate or investigate at all the actions of the Joint Administrators whilst in office, and in particular to investigate the failure on the part of the joint administrators to properly secure the position of the Company in respect of various block discounting agreements entered into by the Company with third party funders;
(b) failed to investigate properly or at all and to document the sums recovered on behalf of the third party agreements and upon what contractual basis this recovery occurred, and to ascertain the cost of such recovery and who paid such costs;
(c) failed to investigate properly or at all the failure on the part of the Joint Administrators to properly prosecute litigation matters of significant value while allowing other matters so litigated to become of no value to the creditors by allowing costs to become disproportionate with sums claimed or recovered;
(d) failed to properly prosecute remaining litigation cases in a proper and diligent manner and/or failed to properly control the costs incurred on those cases with such failure allowing the costs to become disproportionate with the sums actually recovered;
(e) failed to secure the best market price for the specialised equipment belonging to the company and/or to properly control the costs incurred in the sale of such equipment."
Third ground of appeal
"12. It does seem to me quite plain that, in the exercise of the discretion under CPR 73.10, the provisions of the European Convention on Human Rights had to be taken into account and the court's discretion must be applied compatibly with the Convention rights. The Convention right in question is the respect for private and family life and home and the enjoyment of possessions. It is of course in accordance with the law that a charging order has been made and, to the extent that it is now enforced, that will be in accordance with the law also. It will also be in the public interest to enforce charging orders generally, because of the economic importance of ensuring that there is an efficient machinery for the enforcement of debt obligations, even though, unlike in the case of a legal mortgagee, this was not a debt obligation which was voluntarily provided as a secured obligation.
13. In those circumstances, I am quite satisfied that the power to enforce a charging order is compatible with the Convention. Indeed, the contrary is not argued. I am also satisfied, however, that in applying the court's discretion, it must be applied in a way which gives due respect to the right of all those living in the property, not just the debtors, to have respect for their family life and their home. Against that must be weighed the rights of the chargee under the equitable charge, that is, to say the claimant, not to have to wait indefinitely for payment or to have no means of enforcing its security."
"27. Mrs Taylor says that any suggestion of a sale would be completely wrong, partly because of her entire innocence in relation to the debt for which her husband is liable, and relies also on the fact, as I have said, that that indebtedness was incurred against an agreement she reached with her husband and behind her back. She says, in addition to the matters referred to in TLATA (as I shall call the 1996 Act for short), that any order for possession and sale would contravene her human rights. In particular, she refers to and relies upon the European Convention on Human Rights, which has now been incorporated into English law, and the right to respect to family and private life under article 1 of the Convention. She also relies upon article 1 of the first protocol.
28. I considered these provisions in the decision of Close Invoice Finance Ltd v Pile [2008] BPIR 1465, and concluded that, in the exercise of the court's discretion, the provisions of the European Convention on Human Rights did have to be taken into account and the court's discretion had to be applied compatibly with Convention rights. However, I also noted (borrowing language from the first protocol) that it was in accordance with the law when a charging order was made and, to the extent that it is enforced, that also is in accordance with the law. I also said:
'It will also be in the public interest to enforce charging orders generally because of the economic importance of ensuring that there is an efficient machinery for the enforcement of debt obligations, even though, unlike in the case of a legal mortgagee, this is not a debt obligation which was voluntarily provided as a secured obligation.'
29. In those circumstances, I was quite satisfied that the power to enforce the charging order is compatible with the Convention. That was a case where both of the legal owners were also debtors. In this case, of course, Mrs Taylor was not a debtor at all, and her interests had to be taken into account under section 15. In my judgment, section 15 is human rights compliant. Mrs Taylor's human rights are to be taken into account (as are indeed Mr Taylor's). It does not follow from this that Mrs Taylor's interests are necessarily to prevail over the interests of the secured creditor; nor is the reverse true. A balance has to be struck between the various competing interests."
Fourth ground of appeal
Rehearing
Conclusion