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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Lloyds Bank Plc v McBains Cooper [2016] EWHC 2045 (TCC) (06 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2016/2045.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2045 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Lloyds Bank plc |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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McBains Cooper |
Defendant |
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Mr Sean Brannigan QC and Mr Thomas Crangle (instructed by Triton Global Ltd (trading as Robin Simon) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2 February 2016 (Further submissions 7 February 2016)
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Crown Copyright ©
Edwards-Stuart J:
Introduction
The background and summary of the claim
The evidence of the valuation experts
The monthly drawdowns
"That said, the process of drawdown would normally be as follows:
- Copy of valuation of works and certificate sent to McBains Cooper for approval,
- McBains Cooper visit to site and meet with team to assess progress et cetera.
- Borrower forwards "Drawdown Request Letter" to Bank, copied to McBains Cooper detailing the amount of funds requested, a breakdown thereof including VAT elements and enclosing copies of backup invoices.
- McBains Cooper issue a report to Bank detailing Costs, Progress and Authorising Drawdown if appropriate.
It may be easier for us to have a conversation about this, if you wish."
(1) To check the drawdown request so as to ensure that all constituent costs were justified and were in accordance with the facility.(2) To check that the work to the value - at least, approximately - for which payment was being requested had been carried out.
(3) To comment on the progress of the development, with particular reference to any matters adverse to the Bank's position, such as delay or variations to the work, and their implications in relation to the completion of the development and its timing.
(4) To review actual expenditure against the cash flow statement and to confirm that the undrawn balance of the facility was sufficient to meet all the costs of achieving practical completion.
"And the other question potentially is around should we have lent to a religious institution, bearing in mind the highly - the high reputation risk in relation to religious institutions, but also in relation to the PR impact, should we have actually had to pull the plug on this."
(1) if the borrower was proposing to drawdown, or is actually drawing down, money from the facility in respect of work to the third floor; and(2) as to whether there was or is not enough money in the facility to complete the development.
The findings and conclusions in the principal judgment
"3. The role of a project monitor is to check the progress and quality of the works and to approve the applications for drawdown submitted on behalf of the borrower and to make recommendations to the Bank as to the amount that should be paid against the drawdown request. Some witnesses described the project monitor as the Bank's eyes and ears in relation to the project.
7. . . . It is now quite clear that this loan should never have been made by the Bank in the first place (a decision for which it cannot blame McBains Cooper) and that during the course of the work McBains Cooper gave advice that was unquestionably negligent.
73. . . .
(iv) McBains Cooper should have advised the Bank of any significant variations to the building contract, or to any circumstances that were likely to result in a significant variation for which the borrower (and hence the Bank under the facility) would be liable.
(v) McBains Cooper should have advised the Bank as soon as the borrower included costs of works to the third floor in any application for drawdown under the facility.
147. The Bank's real case is (a) that it was misled by inaccurate statements in the Progress Reports confirming the adequacy of the facility to meet the costs of the development, and (b) the failure by Mr Symons to notify the Bank, from PM No 9 onwards, that sums were being included in the applications for drawdown that had been spent on the work to the third floor. As a result, says the Bank, it continued to advance money under the facility in circumstances where, if properly advised, it would not have done.
222. I would have thought that it goes without saying that it was contrary to the Bank's interests to pay for work that fell outside the scope of its facility. It was therefore the duty of Mr Symons to take reasonable care to ensure that this did not happen. I think that one can reach this conclusion as a natural incident of the relationship of project monitor and bank, but if it has to be based on a breach of an identified obligation in the retainer, then it seems to me that it falls within paragraph 3.1.2.
243. However, when the borrower applies to the Bank to drawdown money under the facility, his application should be limited to the work that was in the scope of the facility. It is therefore an important part of a project monitor's role to check the application so as to ensure that it is confined to expenditure falling within the scope of the facility. Thus it was the duty of Mr Symons to check every application carefully. If he was of the opinion that sums had been included in the monthly valuation for work that was, or might have been, outside the scope of the work covered by the facility, it was his duty to advise the Bank accordingly and not to recommend that those sums be included in the monthly drawdown.
263. In these circumstances I consider that it is likely that work on site would have continued, save for work related to the third floor. This is because I consider that the Bank would not have wished to jeopardise the option of completing the development by stopping the work prematurely. PR No 12 would have been issued around mid October and this would have brought the total drawdown up to £1,226,231 (ie. £1,408,582 actually claimed less sums in respect of the third floor works, namely £10,000 + £10,156 + £162,195). By the end of October 2008 I would have expected Mr Clark to have produced a schedule of costs to complete. I find that this would not have been very different to the one that he produced as at 31 December 2008.
264. So, by the end of October 2008, two things would have become apparent. First, Mr Symons would have assessed the amount of the likely costs to complete the original project (ie. without the third floor works) and this would have shown that the likely shortfall in the funds required was at least £325,000, if professional fees are taken into account. Second, Mr Clark would have carried out a similar exercise. If he had done this, I consider that his figures would have showed costs to complete of about £3.4 million, of which about £550,000 would have been attributable to the third floor (in assessing these figures I have added back the £182,350 that, on this scenario, would not have been paid for the third floor but which, by then, had been paid).
265. Put very broadly, I consider that the costs to complete (excluding the third floor) would have been assessed by Mr Symons and Mr Clark at between about £300,000 and £400,000.
277. For the reasons that I have now given if McBains Cooper had properly performed its obligations under the Retainer, the Bank would have become aware of the true financial position in November 2008. It would have taken the decision to terminate the facility and call on the security. I find that this decision would probably have been taken in December 2008 if McBains Cooper had informed the Bank, as it should have done, in August 2008 that the borrower was seeking to drawdown £10,000 for the cost of piling work in relation to the third floor. On this basis, if the Bank had moved reasonably swiftly after it became apparent that Mr Chukwu had no money, I find that it could have put the property on the market in the spring of 2009.
278. Since McBains Cooper did not advise the Bank, either then or at any time prior to the end of December 2008, that (a) that the borrower was proposing to drawdown, or was actually drawing down, money from the facility in respect of work to the third floor and (b) there was not enough money in the facility to complete the development, it is in principle liable for the losses sustained by the Bank after the end of November 2008. That is because I find that the Bank would not have permitted any further drawdowns on the facility thereafter.
284. In assessing any apportionment of liability to the Bank for its contributory negligence I must have regard to both the blameworthiness and the causative potency of its actions. In my view, the lion's share of responsibility for what went wrong after August 2008 must rest with McBains Cooper. As Mr Symons rightly accepted, it was engaged to advise the Bank as to the amounts that should be drawn down under the facility and to take reasonable care to protect the Bank from the loss it would suffer as a result of paying too much."
The loss
Note 1 In his first report Mr Rawlinson said that “taking the position as at 1 March 2009 and with the building completed to the state as at 18 April 2008, I consider that a prospective purchaser would have anticipated an additional spend of a sum of £3,000,000 including costs and allowance for risk and profit” (paragraph 12.8). This, of course, was not the date at which the building’s condition was to be valued, but the figure of £2.86 million put to Mr Rawlinson in cross examination was not explored in re-examination. [Back] Note 2 In this context, it is perhaps slightly ironic that at paragraph 59(g) of the Amended Defence McBains Cooper pleads that the Bank "failed to have any or any adequate regard to the advice provided by McBains Cooper throughout the course of the project (whether orally, by e-mail and/or within the various reports . . . )" - my emphasis. [Back] Note 3 It may be that any recovery from the realisation of the security would be applied to other losses first: it will depend on the circumstances. [Back]