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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Midland Bank Trust Co Ltd v Green (No 1) [1980] UKHL 7 (11 December 1980)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1980/7.html
Cite as: [1980] UKHL 7, [1981] AC 513, [1981] 1 All ER 153, [1981] 2 WLR 28

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JISCBAILII_CASE_PROPERTY

    Parliamentary Archives,
    HL/PO/JU/18/240

    Die Jovis 11° Decembris 1980

    Upon Report from the Appellate Committee to whom
    was referred the Cause Midland Bank Trust Company
    Limited and another against Green and another, That
    the Committee had heard Counsel as well on Tuesday
    the 4th as on Wednesday the 5th and Thursday the 6th
    days of November last upon the Petition and Appeal of
    Robert Derek Green of The Vale Farm, Thoresway,
    Market Rasen, in the County of Lincoln praying that
    the matter of the Order set forth in the Schedule thereto,
    namely an Order of Her Majesty's Court of Appeal of
    the llth day of April 1979 might be reviewed before
    Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court of Parliament and
    that the said Order might be reversed, varied or altered
    or that the Petitioners might have such other relief in the
    premises as to Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court of
    Parliament might seem meet; as also upon the Case of
    Midland Bank Trust Company Limited and Margaret
    Ann Green lodged in answer to the said Appeal; and
    due consideration had this day of what was offered on
    either side in this Cause:

    It is Ordered and Adjudged, by the Lords Spiritual
    and Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her
    Majesty the Queen assembled, That the said Order of
    Her Majesty's Court of Appeal of the 11th day of April
    1979 complained of in the said Appeal be, and the same
    is hereby, Reversed and that the Order of Mr. Justice
    Oliver of the 21st day of October 1977 be, and the same
    is hereby, Restored: And it is further Ordered, That
    the Respondents do pay or cause to be paid to the said
    Appellants the Costs incurred by them in the Court of
    Appeal and also the Costs incurred by them in respect of
    the said Appeal to this House, the amount of such
    last-mentioned Costs to be certified by the Clerk of the
    Parliaments if not agreed between the parties. And it
    is also further Ordered, That the Cause be, and the same
    is hereby remitted back to the Chancery Division of the
    High Court of Justice to do therein as shall be just and
    consistent with this Judgment.



    HOUSE OF LORDS

    MIDLAND BANK TRUST COMPANY LIMITED AND ANOTHER

    (RESPONDENTS)

    v.

    GREEN AND ANOTHER
    (APPELLANTS)

    Lord Wilberforce
    Lord Edmund-Davies
    Lord Fraser of Tullybelton
    Lord Russell of Killowen


    Lord Wilberforce

    my lords,

    This appeal relates to a 300-acre farm in Lincolnshire called " Gravel
    Hill Farm ". It was owned by Walter Stanley Green (" Walter ") and since
    1954, let to his son Thomas Geoffrey Green (" Geoffrey ") who farmed it
    as tenant. Walter owned another larger farm which he farmed jointly
    with another son Robert Derek Green (" Robert "), the appellant. In 1960
    Walter sold this other farm to Robert at £75 per acre.

    On 24th March 1961 Walter granted to Geoffrey an option to purchase
    Gravel Hill Farm, also at £75 per acre. The option was granted for the
    consideration of £1, and so was contractually binding upon Walter. It was
    to remain open for ten years. It seems that the reason why this transaction
    was entered into, rather than one of sale to Geoffrey, was to save estate
    duty on Walter's death.

    This option was, in legal terms, an estate contract and so a legal charge,
    class C, within the meaning of the Land Charges Act 1925. The correct
    and statutory method for protection of such an option is by means of
    entering it in the Register of Land Charges maintained under the Act. If
    so registered, the option would have been enforceable, not only (contrac-
    tually) against Walter, but against any purchaser of the farm.

    The option was not registered, a failure which inevitably called in
    question the responsibility of Geoffrey's solicitor. To anticipate, Geoffrey
    in fact brought proceedings against his solicitor which have been settled
    for a considerable sum, payable if the present appeal succeeds.

    In 1967 there appears to have been some family disagreement. We do
    not know the nature of it, nor the merits. I am not prepared to assume,
    in the absence of any evidence, that either side was in the wrong. All
    we know is that Walter formed the intention, contrary to what he had
    planned in 1961, to defeat Geoffrey's option and to make Gravel Hill
    Farm available for the family. He instructed solicitors to prepare a
    conveyance of it to his wife Evelyne: this the solicitors did after verifying
    that the option was not registered as a Land Charge.

    On or about 17th August 1967 Walter executed a conveyance of Gravel
    Hill Farm to Evelyne for a consideration of £500. The judge found that
    this sum was paid by Evelyne to Walter. It was of course far less than
    the value of the farm, which was then worth about £40,000. The conveyance
    was also a breach of contract by Walter for which Walter or his estate
    was liable to Geoffrey in damages.

    Later, Evelyne made a will in which she left the farm, subject to Walter's
    life interest, to her five children—including Geoffrey. On 5th September
    1967 Geoffrey, who had learnt of the conveyance, caused the option to be
    registered as an estate contract, and on 6th October 1967 gave notice
    exercising the option. Finally, on 27th January 1970, Geoffrey issued a
    writ against Walter and Evelyne's executors (she had died in 1968) claiming
    that the option was still binding, specific performance of the contract
    arising from its exercise and damages. This was later amended so as to
    claim damages for conspiracy by Walter and Evelyne.


    2

    Most of the principals involved in the above transactions are dead. The
    place of Geoffrey is taken by the present respondents as his executors; that
    of Evelyne by the appellant, as her sole surviving executor; the place of
    Walter was taken by Beryl Rosalie Kemp as his executrix, but her defence
    was struck out by order dated 7th October 1975. The issue therefore
    effectively is between the appellant, as representing the estate of Evelyne,
    and the respondents as representing the estate of Geoffrey.

    The trial took place before Oliver J. in 1977. A number of issues arose
    which are no longer relevant. The learned Judge, in an admirable judg-
    ment with which I wholly agree, decided:

    (i) That the sale and conveyance to Evelyne was not a sham
    and was a genuine sale by the vendor to a " purchaser", as
    defined by the Land Charges Act 1925 for money or money's
    worth, and accordingly that the option was not specifically
    enforceable.

    (ii) That Walter's estate had no answer to a claim for damages,
    and that an enquiry as to damages must be made.

    (iii) That any claim for damages against the estate of Evelyne was
    statute-barred by virtue of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous
    Provisions) Act 1934.

    An appeal was brought to the Court of Appeal which, by a majority,
    reversed the judge's decision on point (i), and declared the option specifically
    enforceable. The ground of this decision appears to have been that the
    sale in 1967 was not for " money or money's worth ", within the meaning
    of section 13 of the Land Charges Act 1925. In addition the Master of
    the Rolls was prepared to hold that the protection of the Act was not
    available in a case of fraud meaning thereby " any dishonest dealing done
    so as to deprive unwary innocents of their rightful dues" The respondents,
    however, did not seek to support this except to the extent that they relied
    upon lack of good faith on the part of Evelyne.

    My Lords, section 13(2) of the Land Charges Act 1925 reads as follows:

    " (2) A land charge of class B, class C or class D, created or arising
    " after the commencement of this Act, shall (except as hereinafter
    " provided be void as against a purchaser of the land charged therewith
    "... unless the land charge is registered in the appropriate register
    " before the completion of the purchase:

    " Provided that, as respects a land charge of class D and an estate
    " contract created or entered into after the commencement of this act,
    " this subsection only applies in favour of a purchaser of a legal estate
    " for money or money's worth ".

    As regards the word " purchaser " section 20(8) of the same Act reads:

    " ' Purchaser ' means any person . . . who, for valuable considera-
    " tion, takes any interest in land ..."

    Thus the case appears to be a plain one. The " estate contract", which
    by definition (section 11) includes an option of purchase, was entered into
    after 1st January 1926; Evelyne took an interest (in fee simple) in the land
    " for valuable consideration "—so was a "purchaser ": she was a purchaser
    for money—namely £500: the option was not registered before the
    completion of the purchase. It is therefore void as against her.

    In my opinion this appearance is also the reality. The case is plain: the
    Act is clear and definite. Intended as it was to provide a simple and
    understandable system for the protection of title to land, it should not be
    read down or glossed: to do so would destroy the usefulness of the Act.
    Any temptation to remould the Act to meet the facts of the present case,
    on the supposition that it is a hard one and that justice requires it, is,
    for me at least, removed by the consideration that the Act itself provides
    a simple and effective protection for persons hi Geoffrey's position—viz.—
    by registration.

    3

    The respondents submitted two arguments as to the interpretation of
    section 13(2): the one sought to introduce into it a requirement that the
    purchaser should be " in good faith "; the other related to the words " in
    " money or money's worth ".

    The argument as to good faith fell into three parts: first, that "good
    " faith " was something required of a " purchaser " before 1926; secondly,
    that this requirement was preserved by the 1925 legislation and in particular
    by section 13(2) of the Land Charges Act 1925. If these points could be
    made good, it would then have to be decided whether the purchaser
    (Evelyne) was in " good faith " on the facts of the case.

    My Lords, the character in the law known as the bona fide (good faith)
    purchaser for value without notice was the creation of equity. In order to
    affect a purchaser for value of a legal estate with some equity or equitable
    interest, equity fastened upon his conscience and the composite expression
    was used to epitomise the circumstances in which equity would or rather
    would not do so. I think that it would generally be true to say that the
    words " in good faith " related to the existence of notice. Equity, in other
    words, required not only absence of notice, but genuine and honest absence
    of notice. As the law developed, this requirement became crystallised in
    the doctrine of constructive notice which assumed a statutory form in the
    Conveyancing Act 1882, section 3. But, and so far I would be willing to
    accompany the respondents, it would be a mistake to suppose that the
    requirement of good faith extended only to the matter of notice, or that
    when notice came to be regulated by statute, the requirement of good faith
    became obsolete. Equity still retained its interest in and power over the
    purchaser's conscience. The classic judgment of James L.J. in Pilcher v.
    Rawlins (1872) L.R. 7 Ch. 259, 269 is clear authority that it did not: good
    faith there is stated as a separate test which may have to be passed even
    though absence of notice is proved. And there are references in cases
    subsequent to 1882 which confirm the proposition that honesty or bona
    fides
    remained something which might be enquired into (see Berwick & Co.
    v. Price [1905] 1 Ch 632, 639; Taylor v. London and County Banking Co.
    [1901] 2 Ch 231, 256; Oliver v. Hinton [1899] 2 Ch 264, 273).

    But did this requirement, or test, pass into the property legislation of
    1925?

    My Lords, I do not think it safe to seek the answer to this question by
    means of a general assertion that the property legislation of 1922-25 was
    not intended to alter the law, or not intended to alter it in a particular
    field, such as that relating to purchases of legal estates. All the Acts of
    1925, and their precursors, were drafted with the utmost care, and their
    wording, certainly where this is apparently clear, has to be accorded firm
    respect. As was pointed out in Grey v. Inland Revenue Commissioners
    [1960] AC 1, the Acts of 1922-4 effected massive changes in the law
    affecting property and the House, in consequence, was persuaded to give
    to a plain word (" disposition ") its plain meaning, and not to narrow it
    by reference to its antecedents. Certainly that case should firmly discourage
    us from muddying clear waters. I accept that there is merit in looking at
    the corpus as a whole in order to produce if possible a consistent scheme.
    But there are limits to the possibilities of this process: for example it
    cannot eliminate the difference between registered and unregistered land,
    or the respective charges on them.

    As to the requirement of " good faith " we are faced with a situation of
    some perplexity.

    The expression " good faith ", appears in the Law of Property Act 1925
    definition of "purchaser" ['a purchaser in good faith for valuable con-
    sideration']—section 205(l)(xxi); in the Settled Land Act 1925—section
    117(l)(xxi) [ditto]; in the Administration of Estates Act 1925 section
    55(l)(xviii) [" ' purchaser ' means a lessee, mortgagee or other person who in
    " good faith acquires an interest in property for valuable consideration "]
    and in the Land Registration Act 1925, section 3 (xxi) which does not
    however, as the other Acts do, include a reference to nominal consideration.


    4

    So there is certainly some indication of an intention to carry the concept
    of "good faith " into much of the 1925 code. What then do we find in
    the Land Charges Act 1925? We were taken along a scholarly peregrina-
    tion through the numerous Acts antecedent to the final codification and
    consolidation in 1925—the Land Charges Registration and Searches Act,
    1888, the Law of Property Act 1922, particularly Schedule 7, the Law of
    Property (Amendment) Act 1924 as well as the Yorkshire and Middlesex
    Deeds Registration Acts. But I think, with genuine respect for an interesting
    argument, that such solution as there is of the problem under consideration
    must be sought in the terms of the various Acts of 1925 themselves. So
    far as concerns the Land Charges Act 1925, the definition of " purchaser "
    quoted above does not mention " good faith " at all. " Good faith " did
    not appear in the original Act of 1888, nor in the extension made to that
    Act by the Act of 1922 Schedule 7, nor in the Act of 1924 Schedule 6.
    It should be a secure assumption that the definition of " purchaser for
    " value " which is found in section 4 of the Act of 1888 (. . . " person
    " who for valuable consideration takes any interest in land") together
    with the limitation which is now the proviso to section 13(2) of the Act
    of 1925, introduced in 1922, was intended to be carried forward into the
    Act of 1925. The expression " good faith " appears nowhere in the antece-
    dents. To write the word in, from the examples of contemporaneous Acts,
    would be bold. It becomes impossible when it is seen that the words
    appear in section 3(1) and in section 7(1), in each case in a proviso very
    similar, in structure, to the relevant proviso in section 13(2). If canons
    of constructions have any validity at all, they must lead to the conclusion
    that the omission in section 13(2) was deliberate.

    My Lords, I recognise that the enquiring mind may put the question:
    why should there be an omission of the requirement of good faith in this
    particular context? I do not think there should be much doubt about the
    answer. Addition of a requirement that the purchaser should be in good
    faith would bring with it the necessity of enquiring into the purchaser's
    motives and state of mind. The present case is a good example of the
    difficulties which would exist. If the position was simply that the purchaser
    had notice of the option, and decided nevertheless to buy the land, relying
    on the absence of notification, nobody could contend that she would be
    lacking in good faith. She would merely be taking advantage of a situation,
    which the law has provided, and the addition of a profit motive could not
    create an absence of good faith. But suppose, and this is the respondents'
    argument, the purchaser's motive is to defeat the option, does this make
    any difference? Any advantage to oneself seems necessarily to involve
    a disadvantage for another: to make the validity of the purchase depend
    upon which aspect of the transaction was prevalent in the purchaser's
    mind seems to create distinctions equally difficult to analyse in law as to
    establish in fact: avarice and malice may be distinct sins, but in human
    conduct they are liable to be intertwined. The problem becomes even
    more acute if one supposes a mixture of motives. Suppose—and this may
    not be far from the truth—that the purchaser's motives were in part to take
    the farm from Geoffrey, and in part to distribute it between Geoffrey and
    his brothers and sisters, but not at all to obtain any benefit for herself, is
    this acting in "good faith" or not? Should family feeling be denied a
    protection afforded to simple greed? To eliminate the necessity for
    enquiries of this kind may well have been part of the legislative intention.
    Certainly there is here no argument for departing—violently—from the
    wording of the Act.

    Before leaving this part of the case, I must comment on the case of
    In re Monolithic Building Co. [1915] 1 Ch. 643, which was discussed in
    the Court of Appeal. That was a case arising under section 93 of the
    Companies (Consolidation) Act 1908 which made an unregistered mortgage
    void against any creditor of the company. The defendant Jenkins was a
    managing director of the company, and clearly had notice of the first
    unregistered mortgage: he himself subsequently took and registered a
    mortgage debenture and claimed priority over the unregistered mortgage.


    5

    It was held by the Court of Appeal, first that this was not a case of fraud:
    " it is not fraud to take advantage of legal rights, the existence of which
    " may be taken to be known to both parties" (per Lord Cozens-Hardy
    M.R. p.663). Secondly that section 93 of the Act was clear in its terms,
    should be applied according to its plain meaning, and should not be
    weakened by infusion of equitable doctrines applied by the courts during
    the 19th century. The judgment of the Master of the Rolls contains a
    valuable critique of the well known cases of Le Neve v. Le Neve 3 Atk. 646
    and Greaves v. Tofield 14 Ch. D.563 which arising under the Middlesex
    Registry Act and other enactments, had led the judges to import equitable
    doctrines into cases of priority arising under those Acts, and establishes
    that the principles of those cases should not be applied to modern Acts of
    Parliament.

    My Lords, I fail to see how this authority can be invoked in support of
    the respondents' argument, or of the judgments of the majority of the
    Court of Appeal. So far from supporting them, it is strongly the other
    way. It disposes, for the future, of the old arguments based, ultimately,
    upon Le Neve v. Le Neve for reading equitable doctrines (as to notice, etc.)
    into modern Acts of Parliament: it makes it clear that it is not " fraud "
    to rely on legal rights conferred by Act of Parliament: it confirms the
    validity of interpreting clear enactments as to registration and priority
    according to their tenor.

    The judgment of Phillimore LJ. does indeed contain a passage which
    appears to favour application of the principle of Le Neve v. Le Neve, and
    to make a distinction between a transaction designed to obtain an
    advantage, and one designed to defeat a prior (unregistered) interest. But,
    as I have explained, this distinction is unreal and unworkable, this whole
    passage is impossible to reconcile with the views of the other members of
    the Court of Appeal in the case and I respectfully consider that it is not
    good law.

    My Lords, I can deal more shortly with the respondents' second
    argument. It relates to the consideration for the purchase. The argument
    is that the protection of section 13(2) of the Land Charges Act 1925 does
    not extend to a purchaser who has provided only a nominal consideration
    and that £500 is nominal. A variation of this was the argument accepted
    by the Court of Appeal that the consideration must be " adequate "—an
    expression of transparent difficulty. The answer to both contentions lies
    in the language of the subsection. The word " purchaser ", by definition
    (section 20(8)), means one who provides valuable consideration—a term
    of art which precludes any enquiry as to adequacy. This definition is, of
    course, subject to the context. Section 13(2), proviso, requires money or
    money's worth to be provided: the purpose of this being to exclude the
    consideration of marriage. There is nothing here which suggests, or admits
    of, the introduction of a further requirement that the money must not be
    nominal.

    The argument for this requirement is based upon the Law of Property
    Act 1925 which, in section 205(l)(xxi) defining "purchaser" provides that
    " valuable consideration" includes marriage but does not include a
    " nominal consideration in money ". The Land Charges Act 1925 contains
    no definition of " valuable consideration ", so it is said to be necessary to
    have resort to the Law of Property Act definition: thus " nominal
    consideration in money " is excluded. An indication that this is intended
    is said to be provided by section 199(l)(i). I cannot accept this. The
    fallacy lies in supposing that the Acts—either of them—set out to define
    " valuable consideration "; they do not: they define " purchaser ", and
    they define the word differently (see the first part of the argument).
    " Valuable consideration" requires no definition: it is an expression
    denoting an advantage conferred or detriment suffered. What each Act
    does is, for its own purposes, to exclude some things from this general
    expression: the Law of Property Act includes marriage but not a nominal
    sum in money; the Land Charges Act excludes marriage but allows " money
    " or money's worth ". There is no coincidence between these two; no link

    6

    by reference or necessary logic between them. Section 199(l)(i) by
    referring to the Land Charges Act 1925, necessarily incorporates—for the
    purposes of this provision—the definition of " purchaser " in the latter
    Act—for it is only against such a " purchaser " that an instrument is void
    under that Act. It cannot be read as incorporating the Law of Property
    Act definition into the Land Charges Act. As I have pointed out the
    Land Charges legislation has contained its own definition since 1888,
    carried through, with the addition of the reference to " money or money's
    " worth " into 1925. To exclude a nominal sum of money from section
    13(2) of the Land Charges Act would be to rewrite the section.

    This conclusion makes it unnecessary to determine whether £500 is a
    nominal sum of money or not. But I must say that for my part I should
    have great difficulty in so holding. " Nominal consideration" and a
    " nominal sum " in the law appear to me, as terms of art, to refer to a
    sum or consideration which can be mentioned as consideration but is not
    necessarily paid. To equate " nominal " with " inadequate " or even
    " grossly inadequate" would embark the law upon enquiries which I
    cannot think were contemplated by Parliament.

    I would allow the appeal.

    Lord Edmund-Davies

    my lords,

    For the reasons indicated in the speech of my noble and learned friend.
    Lord Wilberforce, which I have had the advantage of reading in draft, I
    would allow this appeal.

    Lord Fraser of Tullybelton

    my lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech of my noble
    and learned friend, Lord Wilberforce. I agree with it, and for the reasons
    that he gives, I too would allow this appeal.

    Lord Russell of Killowen

    my lords,

    I entirely concur in the reasoning of my noble and learned friend, Lord
    Wilberforce, and cannot usefully add to it. Accordingly I agree that this
    appeal must be allowed.

    Lord Bridge of Harwich

    my lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech of my noble
    and learned friend, Lord Wilberforce. I agree with it and for the reasons
    he gives I too would allow the appeal.

    312926 Dd 8013619 170 12/80


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