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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Farol Holdings Ltd & Ors v Clydesdale Bank Plc & Anor [2023] EWHC 668 (Ch) (22 March 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/668.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 668 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
MASTER KAYE
____________________
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Claim No. BL-2019-000866 | ||
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(1) FAROL HOLDINGS LIMITED (2) JANHILL LIMITED (3) MR AND MRS TPW UGLOW (a firm) | | |
Claimants | |||
and | |||
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(1) CLYDESDALE BANK PLC (2) NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED | | |
Defendants | |||
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AND BETWEEN: |
Claim No. BL-2020-001989 | ||
IVOR GASTON & SON (a firm) | |||
Claimant | |||
and | |||
(1) CLYDESDALE BANK PLC (2) NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED | |||
Defendants | |||
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Bankim Thanki KC, Ian Wilson KC and Richard Hanke (instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) for the First Defendant
Patrick Goodall KC and Natasha Bennett (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for the Second Defendant
Hearing date: 22 March 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Zacaroli and Master Kaye:
(1) At para 180 of the points of claim it is pleaded that "the relationship between Uglow and the Bank arising out of the Uglow FRLs is or was unfair under section 140A(1)(c) of [the 1974 Act] by reason of the non-disclosure of the additional basis points included in the fixed rate".
(2) There are then provided ten paragraphs of particulars, of which only the last is relevant for present purposes. By sub-para 180.10, it is pleaded that:
"The practice of adding significant and hidden basis points to the Market Rate before quoting Uglow a Fixed Rate, in order to generate hidden treasury income (in addition to the income generated from the Margin) to meet internal targets, fell below the standard of commercial conduct reasonably to be expected of banks providing loans to SME customer."
(3) In the first defendant's defence, at para 192.10, para 180.10 of the particulars of claim is denied, on the following basis:
"192.10.1. It is denied that the income element included within the Fixed Rate offered to Uglow was "hidden" income for the reasons set out above.
192.10.2. It is denied that that income was included "to meet internal targets".
192.10.3. Further, Treasury Partners and Business Partners were reviewed against a balanced scorecard that took into account a number of areas of performance, including income targets, of which annual treasury revenue was an element, amongst other factors. It is denied that it was commercially unacceptable for treasury revenue to have been an element in that review analysis.
192.10.4. Uglow is put to strict proof that, if so alleged, it could have entered into a fixed rate loan (or equivalent product) with another lender that did not include an additional income element in the pricing of that product.
192.10.5. In all the circumstances, the Bank's conduct did not fall below the standard of conduct reasonably to be expected of banks providing loans to SME customers."
"The view which a court takes of the fairness or unfairness of a debtor-creditor relationship may legitimately be influenced by the standard of commercial conduct reasonably to be expected of the creditor. The ICOB Rules are some evidence of what that standard is. But they cannot be determinative of the question posed by section 140A, because they are doing different things. The fundamental difference is that the ICOB Rules impose obligations on insurers and insurance intermediaries. Section 140A, by comparison, does not impose any obligation and is not concerned with the question whether the creditor or anyone else is in breach of a duty. It is concerned with the question whether the creditor's relationship with the debtor was unfair. It may be unfair for a variety of reasons, which do not have to involve a breach of duty. There are other differences, which flow from this. The ICOB Rules impose a minimum standard of conduct applicable in a wide range of situations, enforceable by action and sounding in damages. Section 140A introduces a broader test of fairness applied to the particular debtor-creditor relationship, which may lead to the transaction being reopened as a matter of judicial discretion. The standard of conduct required of practitioners by the ICOB Rules is laid down in advance by the Financial Services Authority (now the Financial Conduct Authority), whereas the standard of fairness in a debtor-creditor relationship is a matter for the court, on which it must make its own assessment. Most of the ICOB Rules, including those relating to the disclosure of commission, impose hard-edged requirements, whereas the question of fairness involves a large element of forensic judgment. It follows that the question whether the debtor-creditor relationship is fair cannot be the same as the question whether the creditor has complied with the ICOB Rules, and the facts which may be relevant to answer it are manifestly different. An altogether wider range of considerations may be relevant to the fairness of the relationship, most of which would not be relevant to the application of the rules. They include the characteristics of the borrower, her sophistication or vulnerability, the facts which she could reasonably be expected to know or assume, the range of choices available to her, and the degree to which the creditor was or should have been aware of these matters."
"1. In the context of banks offering fixed rate loan products to SME customers in the period 2002-2010 inclusive, how was the fixed rate offered to customers usually determined by banks? In answering this question, please consider the following sub-questions:
1.1 Was it usual to incorporate an income element within the fixed rate by way of additional basis points? If so:
(A) What level of additional basis points was commonly incorporated?
(B) What was the rationale for incorporating the additional basis points and what costs/risks was it intended to cover?
(C) What, if any, relationship was there between these additional basis points and the "credit margin" / "lending margin", which did not form part of the fixed rate, but was included as part of the overall interest rate?
1.2 When communicating the fixed rate on offer to customers, did banks usually break the fixed rate down into its constituent elements and/or disclose the inclusion of any income element or additional basis points?"
"13. The admissibility of expert evidence (as an exception to the general rule that opinion evidence is inadmissible) was summarised by Evans-Lombe J in Barings Plc v Coopers & Lybrand [2001] PNLR 22, §45 as follows:
"In my judgment the authorities which I have cited above establish the following propositions: expert evidence is admissible under section 3 of the Civil Evidence Act 1972 in any case where the Court accepts that there exists a recognised expertise governed by recognised standards and rules of conduct capable of influencing the Court's decision on any of the issues which it has to decide and the witness to be called satisfies the Court that he has a sufficient familiarity with and knowledge of the expertise in question to render his opinion potentially of value in resolving any of those issues."
14. Thus, the first issue is whether there is a recognised body of expertise governed by recognised standards and rules of conduct relevant to the question which the Court has to decide. Unless there is, the Court should decline to admit evidence which ex hypothesi is not evidence of any body of expertise but rather the subjective opinion of the intended witness."
"The extent of the legal duty in any given situation must, I think, be a question of law for the Court. Clearly if there is some practice in a particular profession, some accepted standard of conduct which is laid down by a professional institute or sanctioned by common usage, evidence of that can and ought to be received. But evidence which really amounts to no more than an expression of opinion by a particular practitioner of what he thinks he would have done had he been placed, hypothetically and without the benefit of hindsight, in the position of the Defendants, is of little assistance to the Court; whilst evidence of the witness' view of what, as a matter of law, the solicitor's duty was in the particular circumstances of the case is, I should have thought, inadmissible, for that is the very question which it is the Court's function to decide."