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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Toothill v HSBC [2008] JRC 046 (17 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2008/2008_046.html Cite as: [2008] JRC 046, [2008] JRC 46 |
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[2008]JRC046
royal court
(Samedi Division)
17th March 2008
Before : |
M.C. St. J. Birt, Esq., Deputy Bailiff, and Jurats Le Brocq and Le Breton. |
Between |
Joyce Toothill |
Appellant |
|
|
|
And |
HSBC |
Respondent |
Advocate H. J. Heath for the Appellant.
Advocate J. Harvey-Hills for the Respondent.
judgment
the deputy bailiff:
1. This is an appeal by the second defendant, Mrs Toothill, against the decision of the Master on 16th January, 2008 to grant summary judgment on claims brought against Mr and Mrs Toothill as first and second defendants by HSBC Bank plc in respect of three loans and an overdraft facility granted by HSBC to the defendants jointly between June 1999 and November 2001. The total amount for which the Master gave judgment was £985,371.09.
2. The defendants defaulted on the loans during the course of 2002 and 2003 since when nothing has been paid. Eventually proceedings were issued by HSBC against both defendants in August 2007. The matter first came before the Royal Court on 7th September at which time the first defendant submitted to judgment but the second defendant ("the appellant" or "Mrs Toothill") placed the matter on the pending list. Following pleadings HSBC applied for summary judgment against the appellant and, as already mentioned, this was granted by the Master on 16th January, 2008.
3. The arguments before the Master and repeated in the Notice of Appeal were fairly wide ranging. In addition certain criticisms were made by the appellant of the procedure before the Master. However this is a re-hearing and during the course of argument before us the issues were narrowed down considerably. Accordingly we propose in this judgment to deal only with the arguments as they were maintained before us.
The background
4. Judgment was entered in respect of four different transactions whereby HSBC advanced sums to Mr and Mrs Toothill jointly. These were as follows:-
(i) A loan of £395,000 in June 1999 ("the June 1999 loan) to enable the defendants to purchase in their joint names the property 61 Elizabeth Avenue, St Brelade ("the property").
(ii) An overdraft facility granted to the defendants jointly in 1999 in the sum of £85,000 and increased to £150,000 in March 2001 ("the overdraft facility").
(iii) A loan of £200,000 in May 2001 ("the May 2001 loan").
(iv) A further loan of £100,000 in November 2001 ("the November 2001 loan").
In respect of each of the advances there was provision for HSBC to register the advance against the property with the appropriate authorities to register being obtained at the time. Registration in fact took place during the latter part of 2002, so that HSBC has judicial hypothecs over the property in respect of the various advances.
5. In view of the potential defences raised, it is necessary to rehearse the facts as they emerge from the affidavits sworn by Mr Andrew Chapman (Commercial Banking Manager of the relevant branch of the HSBC) and the appellant.
(i) The June 1999 loan
6. On 1st May, 1999 Mr and Mrs Toothill submitted an application for a mortgage facility in order to purchase the property. The purchase price was £495,000 and the amount that they sought to borrow was £470,000. The application set out what the monthly repayments on such a sum would be. The form also indicated that the defendants proposed to refurbish the property at a cost of £75,000. The independent survey report obtained at the time stated that £495,000 was a fair reflection of the market value and that the £75,000 of improvements or repairs would enhance the value of the property. At the time Mr Toothill was a senior manager employed by HSBC.
7. The 'Loan to Value' ("LTV") ratio (i.e. the amount of the loan as a percentage of the value of the property) was 95% which was higher than HSBC normally allowed. Their standard figure at the time was 80%. At that stage Mr and Mrs Toothill intended to contribute only £25,000 of their own capital. The papers annexed to the affidavit of Mr Chapman show that HSBC was not happy to lend as much as £470,000. After some discussion the final arrangement agreed was that the loan would be in the sum of £395,000 (which was within the 80% LTV), Mr and Mrs Toothill would contribute £100,000 of their own capital and there would be an overdraft facility of £75,000 to enable them to carry out the proposed improvements.
8. A formal loan agreement was executed by both defendants on 14th June, 1999. The agreement was a standard two-page document and it included specific confirmation as to the purpose ('house purchase'), the fact that there would be a first charge on the property, details of the monthly payments and that the agreement had been entered into by HSBC on the basis of the information and financial details supplied by the defendants. Similar statements as to the truth of the information supplied were contained in the application for the mortgage and are also to be found in the documentation for the May 2001 loan and the November 2001 loan. Ogiers acted for the defendants and were also instructed by HSBC in connection with the obtaining of the signature of both defendants to the documentation necessary to register the loan against the property in due course. The loan went ahead and the property was duly purchased in the defendants' joint names.
9. The internal approval sheet of HSBC dated 20th May, 1999 suggests that the loan fell outside the bank's standard internal guidelines in two respects. It failed the salary multiple requirement and also the life assurance requirement. This meant that the loan had to be referred to higher authority within the bank than if it fell entirely within the guidelines. In this case it was approved by Mr Gibbons on 20th May. In addition Miss Heath referred us specifically to a manuscript note on an internal memo from Mr Gibbons to two of his managers which appears to have been written at a time when the contemplated borrowing was £470,000 which reads:-
"James Toothill - he is, will be your direct report. My stance could have a motivational impact. May we please first discuss".
(ii) The overdraft facility
10. Although an overdraft facility of £75,000 was agreed in principle at the time of the June 1999 loan, it does not appear actually to have been put in place until October 1999. The formal documentation is apparently no longer available but there is a file note dated 26th October, 1999 from which it appears that there was an existing overdraft limit on the defendant's joint account of £10,000 and that they had exceeded this so that the overdrawn amount as at October was £24,484. The writer notes that the £75,000 facility needed to be put in place and this appears then to have been done. The stated purpose of the £75,000 facility remained as expressed in June, namely to carry out improvements to the property. Following this occurrence, the total overdraft facility available to the defendants was £85,000 made up of the pre-existing facility of £10,000 and the additional agreed facility of £75,000.
11. Mr Toothill left his employment with HSBC on 31st December, 2000 and set up his own business. In March 2001 the defendants applied for an increase in the overdraft facility from £85,000 to £150,000 i.e. an increase of £65,000. The stated purpose of the increase according to a memo dated 19th March 2001 was to assist with the funding of the business start-up. The bank agreed to the increased overdraft which was entered into on 22nd March, 2001. The memo of 19th March recorded that the application conformed with the bank's current lending guidelines.
(iii) The May 2001 loan
12. On 20th March, 2001 the defendants submitted a written loan application (known as an equity release loan because there was already a mortgage on the property) in the sum of £200,000. The purpose was stated in the application form as being 'home improvements'. The application made reference to a professional valuation which was sent direct to HSBC. This valuation was dated 19th March, 2001 and was prepared by Gillborn Associates. The valuation stated that some basic repairs and decoration had been carried out since the purchase by the defendants and that, in its present condition, the property was valued at £525,000. The report carried on to say that the writer had seen the architect's drawings of the proposed refurbishment works which he had been advised by Mr Toothill would cost in the region of £150,000. The report went on to say that, following the proposed works of refurbishment, the property would be worth £850,000. The application again contained a representation that the statements made by the defendants in relation to the loan application were true and complete to the best of their knowledge and belief. The form also stated in bold type immediately above the signatures of Mr and Mrs Toothill "your home is at risk if you do not keep up payments on a mortgage or other loans secured on it."
13. The application appears to have been approved on 19th April, 2001 and the relevant 'mortgage approval form' was signed by Mr Collier, head of Personal Financial Services. The approval form noted that the application did not conform to the bank's standard internal guidelines in three respects. Firstly, it failed the salary multiple requirement, secondly it failed the employee requirement (by which appears to be meant that Mr Toothill was no longer an employee of HSBC) and thirdly it exceeded the maximum term requirement in that it would not be completely repaid by retirement age. A loan agreement reflecting the additional loan of £200,000 was sent to the defendants and they both signed it on 10th May, 2001. As before, this agreement set out the amount borrowed, the monthly payments and the security. The loan was released in tranches of £50,000 to the defendants' joint current account during the course of 2001.
The November 2001 loan
14. On 21st October, 2001 the applicants submitted a further loan application. This time the sum applied for was £100,000 and the stated purpose on the form signed by both applicants was 'complete refurbishment'. The application was approved by Mr Collier but he appears to have been given additional information to that contained in the application form (presumably by Mr Toothill) because he wrote in the box above his signature "Full and final assistance to allow house refurbishment and business injection." Again the mortgage approval form states that the application was outside the internal guidelines in two respects. Firstly, it failed the salary multiple requirement and secondly, it failed the employee requirement.
15. The defendants' joint current account (to which the various loans were paid and the overdraft debited) had a standard mandate for a joint account, namely either joint account holder was entitled to instruct HSBC to make a payment from the account. According to the affidavit of Mr Chapman, banks do not monitor the use of joint accounts to ensure that the wishes of one joint account holder with regard to the use of the funds in that account are observed by the other account holder. HSBC did not do so in respect of this account but, given the suggestion by Mrs Toothill that money was used to support her husband's company, Mr Chapman has, for the purposes of this application, reviewed the bank statements of the joint account and of the account of Mr Toothill's company, which was also held at HSBC. The statements do not give details of the recipients of payments but he has found certain debit entries on the joint account statements which appear to correspond with credit entries on the company's statements. These total £284,000 and are as follows:-
Date Value
8th August 2001 £40,000
16th October 2001 £45,000
26th October 2001 £4,000
20th November 2001 £50,000
4th December 2001 £20,000
17th December 2001 £25,000
19th February 2002 £100,000
The total amount borrowed (not including the amount borrowed under the June 1999 loan) was £450,000.
16. As already stated the defendants failed to keep up the payments on the various loans and the Master gave judgment as follows:-
In each case interest continues to accrue until payment.
The Law
17. It is not disputed that Mr and Mrs Toothill agreed jointly and severally to borrow the various sums referred to above from HSBC. There was therefore a contract between each of them and HSBC. In the absence of some 'vice de consentment', that contract was binding upon both defendants - 'la convention fait la loi des parties'.
18. The law recognises that, in certain circumstances, an apparent consent to a contract can be set aside because of a 'vice de consentment'; for example, if A has been induced to enter into a contract with B by reason of a misrepresentation of fact by B.
19. In this case, Advocate Heath argues that HSBC has been guilty of misrepresentation towards the appellant. In this area of the law of contract, there is no material difference between English law and Jersey law. A misrepresentation is a false statement of fact, past or present, as distinct (generally) from a statement of opinion, or of intention or of law. Whilst most representations are express, they may also be implied. A person may also be guilty of misrepresentation by conduct. Thus a person who sits down in a restaurant and orders a meal is representing thereby that he has the means to pay. Advocate Heath argues that HSBC was guilty of misrepresentation by conduct and we deal with this below when considering her submissions on the facts.
20. Secondly, Advocate Heath submits that HSBC has been guilty of 'réticence dolosive' (or 'dol par réticence') by failing to disclose to the second defendant that the May 2001 and November 2001 loans fell outside the bank's normal lending guidelines. In support of the suggestion that silence can give rise to a remedy in these circumstances she cited only the following extract from the judgment of Bailhache, Bailiff in Steelux Holdings Limited v Edmonstone [2005] JLR 152 at para 13:-
21. The above dictum is clearly obiter as the Court in that case did not need to consider the issue further. The position under English law is expressed somewhat differently. It is summarised in Chitty on Contract (29th Edition) as follows at para 6-013:-
22. This Court would wish expressly to leave open the question of whether the law of Jersey should recognise a duty of positive disclosure in the wider circumstances envisaged by the Bailiff or whether a duty of positive disclosure should be confined to those circumstances where it exists under English law, even if, jurisprudentially, it is preferred in this jurisdiction to treat it as dol par réticence. Such a decision would be a matter of considerable practical importance to those who contract under Jersey law and should be the subject of full argument and consideration. However, we are today concerned only with the question of whether the appellant has shown an arguable defence. In the light of the dictum of the Bailiff, it is obviously arguable that, if HSBC may have been guilty of 'dishonest or fraudulent silence', the appellant may have a defence to the claim and leave to defend should be given.
23. Both of the above possible defences involve alleged wrongdoing on behalf of HSBC as the opposite contracting party. A third possible defence relied upon by Mrs Toothill is somewhat different. It is contended that, in relation to the additional £65,000 overdraft facility in March 2001, the May 2001 loan and the November 2001 loan, she was acting under the undue influence of her husband, the first defendant. However, no allegation of undue influence is made against HSBC itself.
24. This raises an issue which has given rise to important judicial decisions in England, namely Barclays Bank Plc v O'Brien [1994] 1 AC 180 and Royal Bank of Scotland Plc v Etridge (No.2) [2002] 2 AC 773. In each of these cases the wife had entered into a guarantee of a loan to her husband and had agreed to security for the loan being given over the jointly owned home. The problem was clearly explained in the judgment of Lord Nicholls in Etridge:-
25. Following Etridge, a wife seeking to set aside security over the jointly owned home has to prove the following:-
(i) that she was unduly influenced by the husband to give the security or was induced to do so by misrepresentation on his part;
(ii) that the bank was put upon inquiry as to the existence of undue influence or misrepresentation; and
(iii) that the bank did not take the reasonable steps laid down by the House of Lords in Etridge to draw the potential consequences of giving security to her attention and as a result is fixed with notice of the undue influence and/or misrepresentation so that it can not enforce the security against the wife.
See the judgment of Lord Hobhouse at para 101 of Etridge and para 20 of the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Chater v Mortgage Services Number Two Ltd [2002] EWCA Civ 490.
26. As to when a bank is put 'on inquiry' it will invariably be so when the wife gives a guarantee for a loan to the husband or the company through which he conducts his business. That is because such a transaction is on its face disadvantageous to the wife, who obtains no direct benefit from it. However, where there is a joint loan to the husband and wife, the wife will normally benefit to the same extent as the husband and therefore the bank is not put on inquiry. The position was summarised by Lord Nicholls at para 48 of his judgment in Etridge as follows:-
27. During the course of the hearing, Miss Heath conceded that, not being aware of any Norman or French principles which might come to her aid as against the bank where the husband had been guilty of undue influence or misrepresentation, she needed to argue that the principles laid down in O'Brien and Etridge formed part of the law of Jersey. Mr Harvey-Hills also submitted that we should hold the law of Jersey to be similar to that of England as outlined in these two cases.
28. The law of undue influence in Jersey is similar to that of English law and we find that the principles underlying the decisions in O'Brien and Etridge are entirely consistent with those of Jersey law. Furthermore, there are strong policy grounds for thinking that the law in this jurisdiction should be the same as in England. The majority of banks who lend money on the security of immoveable property in the island are UK owned. Their guidelines and procedures have been established in accordance with the clear judicial guidance offered in Etridge and their personnel will have been trained accordingly. Furthermore, the competing policy considerations referred to by Lord Nicholls in the passage referred to above at paragraph 24 are equally applicable in Jersey and a solution which addresses both considerations needs to be found. In our judgment the position established in Etridge achieves a proper balance between these competing considerations and we hold the law of Jersey to be like effect. It follows that, taking the conventional situation of a principal debtor and a guarantor, where those two parties are in a close, emotional relationship or non-commercial relationship, the risk that the principal debtor will improperly exert undue influence over the guarantor or will misrepresent the position to the guarantor is sufficient to fix the bank with constructive notice of any such impropriety unless the bank can show that it has taken 'reasonable steps' to minimise the risk of the guarantor having entered into the guarantee under any misapprehension or as a result of undue influence on the part of the principal debtor. The 'reasonable steps' which banks should take in future are those laid down by the House of Lords in O'Brien as amended in Etridge.
Summary judgment
29. The test for considering whether to grant summary judgment is well established - see for example paragraph 8 of the judgment of Bailhache, Bailiff in Tomes v Coke-Wallis [2002] JRC 131A. In his judgment the Master quoted at length from paras 14/4/3 - 14/4/5 of the 1999 Edition of the White Book and we agree that those passages correctly describe the relevant principles. In short the Court must consider whether the defendant has shown an arguable defence i.e. whether there is a triable issue. If so, leave to defend should be given. We would however refer specifically to the passage at 14/4/5 of the 1999 White Book which states:-
As is stated later in the same passage:-
The defences
30. The Master described the Answer of the appellant as being 'in a somewhat convoluted form' and it clearly raised a number of matters, many of which have not been pursued. For example it was pleaded that, in relation to the overdraft, the May 2001 loan and the November 2001 loan, HSBC did not pay the monies advanced to the parties' joint account but paid them instead direct to Mr Toothill's business account. The appellant has now conceded that this was not so and that HSBC paid all monies advanced into the parties' joint account. It was also pleaded that the appellant never signed personally the documents necessary for registration of the June 1999 loan but that these had been signed under a power of attorney. It is now conceded that this is not so and that she signed the relevant documents at the time. It was also pleaded that Mr Toothill misrepresented the position to the appellant although no particulars were given as to the nature of the alleged misrepresentation. In her affidavit sworn for the purposes of the application of summary judgment, no mention is made of any misrepresentation and Miss Heath quite properly did not pursue the matter before this Court. Finally the Answer suggests that, by the time of the May 2001 loan and the November 2001 loan, the defendants had ascertained that the proposed refurbishment to the property would cost £300,000. This made the work uneconomic and they had decided not to proceed. This meant that the statements in the mortgage application forms signed by both defendants for the May 2001 loan and the November 2001 loan that the monies were required for 'home improvements' and 'complete refurbishment' respectively were completely false. In her affidavit, the appellant did not pursue this point.
31. What does emerge from the appellant's affidavit is that she left all financial matters to her husband. He carried out all the negotiations with the bank and she simply signed the relevant papers when he requested her to do so. This usually involved her going down to the bank to sign them. For the purposes of this application, we proceed on the basis that this was indeed the position.
32. With that introduction, we turn to consider the defences raised in relation to each of the loans and the overdraft.
(i) The June 1999 loan
33. The money from the 1999 loan was clearly used for the benefit of both defendants as it went towards the purchase of the property. Miss Heath relies upon only one line of defence in relation to this loan, namely misrepresentation on the part of HSBC.
34. She puts her case this way. She points out that the documents show that the loan eventually granted (i.e. £395,000) exceeded the bank's internal guidelines in two respects. First, it exceeded the salary multiple requirement i.e. the amount loaned was more than the normal multiple of the borrowers' combined salary. Secondly, it failed to the life assurance requirement. Although this is not specified in the documents, it presumably means that the amount of life assurance carried by the parties was not as large as the bank would normally require. In addition, Miss Heath relied upon the suggestion that one of the reasons for the bank agreeing to the loan was a motivational reason i.e. it wished to do nothing to de-motivate Mr Toothill by refusing the loan or alternatively wished to motivate him by agreeing to the loan (see para 9 above).
35. She contended that HSBC was guilty of misrepresentation by conduct. By proceeding with the loan without saying anything to the appellant, the bank was impliedly representing to her that the loan was in accordance with its internal guidelines and that there was nothing unusual about the loan, when the bank knew that this was not so.
36. Even assuming for these purposes that the loan was indeed outside the bank's internal guidelines in these two respects and that the bank was influenced in its decision by a desire to motivate or not to de-motivate the husband, we find this to be an untenable defence.
37. A bank and a borrower are on the opposite sides of the contract. The bank owes no duty (whether in contract or in tort) to advise the borrower (or a guarantor) either on their financial position or on whether they should take independent legal advice. The bank is entitled to have regard only to its own interests. It is under no duty to advise the borrower (or guarantor) on whether the loan is sensible or appropriate from the borrower's point of view. As Warne and Elliott 'Banking litigation' put it at para 3 -007:-
See also Barclays Bank v Khaira [1992] 1 WLR 623.
38. The internal guidelines of a bank in relation to its lending policies are just that. They are guidelines for the bank to evaluate the risk of extending a particular loan. They are for the protection of the bank. They are not absolute and can be departed from, as Mr Chapman said in his affidavit and, in any event, it is a matter entirely for the bank as to the level of risk which it is willing to take in connection with a particular loan. Given that it has no duty to advise the borrower on his financial position, it must follow that there cannot be any duty on a bank to disclose to a borrower whether the lending does or does not fall within its normal lending guidelines, which are discretionary in any event. Miss Heath was unable to point to any authority which suggested that any such duty might exist.
39. It must follow that the fact that a bank agrees to enter into a loan cannot carry with it any representation as to whether the loan does or does not fall within its internal lending guidelines. In some cases the loan will fall within those guidelines; in others it will fall outside them because they are only discretionary guidelines and the relevant senior manager will have decided to proceed in any event. It is for the borrower to decide whether he is willing to borrow the particular amount and not for the bank to advise him upon it. The application form signed by both defendants in this case set out the proposed monthly payments arising from a loan of £470,000. The loan agreement which they actually signed (for the lesser sum of £395,000 which was eventually agreed) also set out the amount of the loan, the monthly payments, the security and the fact that the monthly payments would be made from the parties' joint account. There was no arguable misrepresentation by HSBC towards the second defendant.
40. This being the only defence raised in relation to the June 1999 loan, it follows that HSBC is entitled to judgment in respect of that loan.
(ii) The May 2001 loan
41. In respect of this loan Miss Heath raises three possible defences, namely misrepresentation by conduct by the bank, dol par réticence on the part of the bank, and undue influence by the appellant's husband coupled with the bank having constructive notice of the same. We shall consider these in turn.
42. In relation to misrepresentation, Miss Heath's argument is essentially the same as in connection with the June 1999 loan. However, in this case, the loan was outside the internal guidelines in the three respects referred to para 13 above. Furthermore, she argued that it was outside the guidelines in two additional respects, namely the LTV valuation and the defendants' outgoings as a percentage of income. She accepted that the figures on the Mortgage Approval Form suggested that these two aspects were within the guidelines but she contended that the figures were wrong. Thus, in relation to the LTV, the value taken in the form was £850,000 (the value after the proposed refurbishment) instead of £525,000 (the value at the time before the work had been carried out) and the existing borrowings were understated because they did not include the overdraft facility. The bank did not accept that the figures were erroneous and conceded only that the loan of £200,000 was outside the internal guidelines in the three respects referred to earlier.
43. It is not for us to resolve any factual dispute of this nature on an application for summary judgment. However, for the reasons given in relation to the June 1999 loan, even if the May 2001 loan fell outside the bank's internal guidelines in the five respects referred to by Miss Heath, this does not avail the appellant. The fact that HSBC entered into the May 2001 loan agreement carried with it no representation that the loan fell within the bank's internal guidelines. There was accordingly no misrepresentation, whether by conduct or otherwise.
44. As to dol par réticence (or réticence dolosive as it is referred to in Steelux), Miss Heath relies upon essentially the same facts as in connection with misrepresentation. She argues that to keep silent about the fact that the loan fell outside the bank's internal guidelines in five respects amounted to fraud (dol) on its part.
45. We have already expressed reservations about whether Jersey Law should be developed so as to incorporate a form of misrepresentation by silence as envisaged in the concept of dol par réticence which goes beyond the circumstances where silence gives rise to a remedy under English Law. However, accepting for present purposes that it is arguable that it should be so developed, it nevertheless requires, as the Bailiff said in Steelux, a dishonest or fraudulent silence; otherwise it cannot amount to dol. Is it arguable that the bank's silence in this case was dishonest or fraudulent? In our judgment it is not. We have already held that it is clear law that a bank does not owe any duty to advise a borrower on the financial wisdom of entering into the loan. It is for the borrower to look after his own interests. Furthermore it is not contested that the internal guidelines are intended for the bank's own protection and are discretionary in the sense that, if it so wishes, the bank may move outside them. In those circumstances, it is in our judgment not even arguable that a failure by the bank to inform the borrower (or a guarantor) that a particular loan falls outside these discretionary guidelines can amount to a fraudulent or dishonest silence.
46. We turn therefore to the question of undue influence and constructive notice. As mentioned at para 25, the appellant must show that:-
(i) she was unduly influenced by Mr Toothill to agree to the loan and security;
(ii) HSBC was put on inquiry as to the existence of undue influence; and
(iii) if it was, it did not take reasonable steps to draw matters to her attention.
47. Mr Harvey-Hills concedes that, if in relation to any particular loan, the Court is satisfied that there is a triable issue on (i) and (ii), then summary judgment should not be given, as he accepts that the question of whether HSBC took reasonable steps is a matter which is arguable and should accordingly go to trial. We therefore concentrate on issues (i) and (ii).
48. In relation to the May 2001 loan, we propose to consider first issue (ii), namely whether HSBC was put on inquiry that there might have been undue influence. If it was not, then it does not matter whether there was in fact undue influence; the bank is entitled to enforce its security.
49. We begin by repeating part of para 48 Lord Nicholls' judgment in Etridge quoted at para 25 above;
50. We have been referred to two cases where the English courts have had to consider whether a bank was put on inquiry in the context of a joint borrower (as opposed to a guarantor). The first is CIBC Mortgages Plc v Pitt [1994] 1 AC 200. In that case the husband and wife jointly owned the matrimonial home with a small outstanding mortgage on it. The husband informed the wife that he wished to obtain a loan on the house to purchase shares on the stock market which would improve their standard of living. The wife was reluctant but he embarked on a course of conduct putting pressure on her which the trial judge held amounted to undue influence. In consequence, she agreed to the suggestion. The application form was for a loan of £150,000 described as a re-mortgage and the purpose being stated as "proposed purchase of holiday home". The application form was signed by the husband and the wife although the wife said she did not read it and was not aware of the stated purpose of the loan. The loan was approved and the offer confirmed that it was understood that the proceeds of the advance were to be used to purchase a second property. The transaction went ahead and the money was paid by the bank into the parties' joint account. The husband then used the money to buy shares in his own name. These subsequently declined in value and the bank sort to repossess the property pursuant to the security which the parties had given.
51. The House of Lords accepted that there had been undue influence but held that the bank had not been put on inquiry. There was nothing to indicate to the bank that this was anything other than a normal advance to husband and wife for their joint benefit. The security was therefore enforceable.
52. In Chater v Mortgage Agency Services Number Two Ltd [2002] EWCA Civ 490, a mother agreed to borrow money on the security of her home in order to provide capital for her son to establish a business. They made a joint application to the plaintiff for a loan secured on the home. On the application form, the purpose of the loan was described as "purchase". The plaintiff duly offered a loan and the purpose was said in the offer document to be "other home improvements". The house was transferred into the joint names of the mother and her son and the loan was secured on the property. The monies were advanced by cheque made out to them jointly but the mother endorsed it over to the son.
53. In due course there was a default and the plaintiff sought to enforce its security against the home. The trial judge held that the son had been guilty of undue influence and that the plaintiff had been put on an inquiry as to the existence of such undue influence. The Court of Appeal overturned the judge's decision on this second point and held that the plaintiff had not been put on inquiry. We would quote some of the passages from the judgment of Scott-Baker LJ in order to show the approach of the court to this issue.
54. In the present case, the purpose of the May 2001 loan was said by Mr and Mrs Toothill on the mortgage application form to be 'home improvements'. This was consistent with what HSBC had been told at the time of the original purchase in June 1999 and would not therefore have come as any form of surprise. This stated purpose was supported by the report from Gillborn Associates which referred to some work having been carried out, to having seen the architect's drawings in relation to the proposed improvements and gave the opinion that, if the works were carried out, the value of the property would increase from £525,000 to £850,000. The mortgage application form signed by both parties elaborated on the purpose by saying the following:-
So far, therefore, there is nothing which could conceivably have put HSBC on inquiry as to whether the loan was in truth for the benefit of Mr Toothill alone rather than for the joint benefit of him and his wife.
55. Miss Heath relies upon the fact that HSBC was aware that Mr Toothill had started his own business following his departure from the bank at the end of December 2000 and was also aware that he needed funds for the business because, as described in para 11 above, it had been informed on 19th March, 2001 that the increase of £65,000 in the overdraft facility was required in order to assist the funding of the business start up. The mortgage application form was dated the next day and Miss Heath argues that the bank was therefore at that time aware that Mr Toothill was starting his new business and needed funds. It was therefore put on inquiry as to whether the true purpose of the May 2001 loan was to support the business.
56. We do not consider it even arguable that the bank was put on notice by reason of these circumstances. It is perfectly normal for a loan to be for one purpose and an overdraft facility or another loan to be for a different purpose. As the Court of Appeal held in Chater, a bank is not a detective and is entitled to take an application at face value unless there are grounds for thinking that the stated purpose is incorrect. In our judgment, the mere fact that the bank was aware that, in a separate transaction, the parties were obtaining a facility to borrow £65,000 by way of overdraft to assist the business comes nowhere near suggesting to the bank that the true purpose of the May 2001 loan might have been other than as represented by the borrowers. The stated purpose of property improvements was not only consistent with what the bank had been told in 1999 but it was supported by the report from Gillborn Associates showing that architect's drawings had been prepared and that the works would increase considerably the value of the property.
57. Indeed, if Miss Heath is correct and the bank was lending £200,000 in the knowledge that this sum was to be or might be used for the husband's business rather than for improvements to the property, it was effectively lending unsecured because the value of the property in its unimproved state (£525,000) was considerably less than the aggregate amount which, when added to the June 1999 loan, the bank was agreeing to lend. It seems highly unlikely that the bank would have been willing to act in this way.
58. In summary, we have no hesitation in holding that, on the evidence placed before us, it is unarguable that HSBC was aware or ought to have been aware that the May 2001 loan was not intended for the joint benefit of the parties. It was therefore not put on inquiry as to whether there had been undue influence. It follows that, even if there was any undue influence on the part of Mr Toothill, HSBC is entitled to summary judgment in relation to the May 2001 loan.
(iii) The November 2001 loan
59. Miss Heath's case on misrepresentation and dol in relation to the November 2001 loan was essentially identical to that for the May 2001 loan, save that one of the respects in which the May 2001 loan had fallen outside the bank's internal guidelines (the normal term was exceeded because it would not be repaid by retirement age) was not breached in respect of the November 2001 loan. It follows that our decision on this aspect is the same. The fact that the bank entered into the November 2001 loan agreement without informing the appellant that the loan was outside its standard internal guidelines in these respects could not amount to misrepresentation or dol par réticence.
60. In relation to undue influence and constructive notice on the part of the bank, the position is somewhat different from that of the May loan. In the latter case, as we have just described, there was nothing to suggest to the bank that the funds were required for the husband's sole purposes. It was not therefore placed on inquiry as to whether there had been any undue influence. The circumstances surrounding the November 2001 loan were somewhat different. Although the application form signed by both applicants stated that the purpose of the loan was to 'complete refurbishment', it is clear that the bank was informed (presumably by Mr Toothill) that there was a second purpose because the Mortgage Approval Form in respect of the November loan referred to the purpose as being 'full and final assistance to allow house refurbishment and business injection'. Mr Harvey-Hills argued, because, so far as the bank was aware, the loan was to be used partly for the joint purposes of the husband and the wife, this meant that the case did not fall within para 48 of Lord Nicholls' judgment in Etridge so as to place the bank on inquiry. We disagree. No allocation of the loan between the two purposes was given and in our judgment, once the bank was told that an unquantified part of the joint loan was to be used for the husband's business, it was certainly arguably placed on inquiry so that that issue is fit to go to trial.
61. We therefore have to consider whether the appellant has produced sufficient evidence to show an arguable case in relation to the first limb of her defence in this case as described in para 46 above, namely that she entered into the November 2001 loan under the undue influence of her husband.
62. We accept that, on the basis of the appellant's affidavit, there is evidence fit to go to trial that she placed trust and confidence in her husband in relation to their financial affairs, that he carried out the negotiations with HSBC, and that she signed all the various documents at his request by attending fairly briefly at the bank's premises. However, there needs to be some evidence that, in doing so, she acted under the undue influence of her husband. In this connection we would refer to extracts from the speeches of two of their lordships in Etridge. Lord Nicholls said as follows:-
Lord Scott of Foscote said the following:-
63. As mentioned above at para 29, it is incumbent upon a defendant opposing an application for summary judgment to swear an affidavit which particularises and shows clearly the facts relied upon for the alleged defence.
64. Like the Master, we have searched in vain in the appellant's affidavit for any evidence that she was acting under the undue influence of her husband in relation to any of these transactions. Put simply, nothing in the affidavit suggests that he brought any pressure to bear on her, that she signed against her better inclination or anything of that nature. Her evidence is confined to an assertion that she had trust and confidence in her husband, that she left financial matters to him and that she signed the documents at the bank when he requested her to do so. That is a classic example of the sort of case envisaged by Lord Scott in the passages referred to above which does not of itself amount to undue influence.
65. It would not take much additional evidence in those circumstances to raise a triable issue. However, the present evidence alone, without even any assertion on the appellant's part in her affidavit that she acted under the undue influence of her husband, is insufficient and means that no arguable defence has been raised.
66. It follows that HSBC is entitled summary judgment in respect of the November 2001 loan.
(iv)The overdraft facility
67. Miss Heath accepted that the overdraft facility had to be considered in two parts, namely the sum of £85,000 which was agreed in 1999 (being the original £10,000 overdraft plus a further £75,000) and the increase of £65,000 in the facility agreed in March 2001.
68. During the course of her reply, Miss Heath accepted that there was no defence in relation to the £85,000. There was no evidence that it fell outside the bank's guidelines and accordingly there was no arguable case of misrepresentation or dol on the part of the bank. Furthermore, given that it was agreed in 1999 before Mr Toothill left the employment of the bank, she accepted that there was no allegation of undue influence or any suggestion that the bank could be put on inquiry in relation to such undue influence, if there had been any. In short she conceded that judgment should be given in respect of £85,000.
69. In relation to the additional facility of £65,000 in March 2001, she did not rely on misrepresentation or dol because there was no evidence that the additional facility fell outside any of the bank's guidelines. On the contrary the memo of 19th March, 2001 stated that the application conformed with current bank lending guidelines.
70. She relies in this case on undue influence and constructive notice. The stated purpose of the additional overdraft facility was the funding of the business start up. It follows that, in accordance with the dictum of Lord Nicholls in Etridge referred to earlier, the bank was put on inquiry as to whether there was any undue influence notwithstanding that it was a joint overdraft facility. However, for the reasons given in relation to the November 2001 loan, we find that there is simply no evidence put before us of actual undue influence. There is accordingly no triable issue on this aspect. HSBC is therefore entitled to summary judgment in relation to the overdraft.
71. We should add, for the sake of completeness, that, although we do not strictly need to consider it because of our finding that the bank was not put on inquiry in relation to the May 2001 loan, the lack of evidence of actual undue influence is equally applicable in respect of that loan.
Summary
72. For the reasons given we find as follows:-
(i) There is no arguable defence of misrepresentation or 'dol par réticence' in relation to any of the loans. No such defences were alleged in relation to the overdraft facility.
(ii) As to the suggested defence of undue influence and constructive notice (which was raised in relation to the additional overdraft facility of £65,000, the May 2001 loan and the November 2001 loan), we find that, on the evidence put before us, there is no arguable case that the appellant entered into these transactions under the undue influence of her husband. If we are wrong in that conclusion, we would have given leave to defend in relation to the increased overdraft facility of £65,000 and the November 2001 loan because HSBC was put on inquiry in relation to those two transactions. However we would still have refused leave to defend in relation to the May 2001 loan because there is no arguable case that HSBC was put on inquiry in relation to that transaction.
73. Accordingly we conclude that the Master was right to give summary judgment on all the transactions and we dismiss this appeal.