|
(JEPH
WILLIAM DICKSON |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
(
(AND
(
|
|
|
(PLAYA
DEL SOL LIMITED
|
DEFENDANT
|
Supreme
Court
Action No. 125 of 1981
7th April, 1982.
Alcantara, J
Mr. Bernard
Q.A. Pitts, for the Plaintiff.
Mr. D.B. Courtenay, for the Defendant.
Mortgage
of Property - Order of sale by mortgagee - Mortgagees power
of sale - Section 68A(1) of the Law of Property Ordinance
- Property sold at a grossly undervalued price to a company
controlled by mortgagee - Court finding as a fact that no
sale took place - Plaintiff entitled to principal and interest.
J
U D G M E N T
Mr. Jeph
William Dickson, the Plaintiff, lent $50,000 (U.S.) to the
Defendant, Playa del Sol Limited, on a mortgage dated 29th
April, 1972. The property mortgaged was in the region of 20,000
acres of land valued at $10 to $12 U.S. per acre.
The mortgage
deed contained two things, a power of sale and a clause excluding
Section 81 of the Law o f Property Ordinance.
Whereas
before 1964 a mortgagee had to come to Court to obtain an
order for sale by virtue of an amendment, Section 68A of the
Law of Property, a mortgagee could do so without a court order.
Section 68A(1) reads:
"Mortgages
Power of Sale without order of Court. |
68A.-(1)
Where, by virtue of subsection (3) of section sixty-eight
of this Ordinance, the mortgagee deed provides that when the
mortgage money has become due the mortgagee shall have a power
without any order Court to sell or to concur with any other
person in selling the mortgaged property, or any part thereof,
either subject to prior charges or not, and either together
or in lots, by public auction or by private contract, subject
to such conditions respecting title, or evidence of title,
or other matter, as the mortgagee thinks fit, with power to
vary any contract for sale, and to buy in at an auction, or
to rescind any contract for sale, and to resell without being
answerable for any loss occasioned thereby, the mortgagee
may exercise such power without applying to the Court for
an order for the sale of the mortgaged property."
And -
"(4)
Where the Registrar is satisfied that a transfer of registered
land under this section vesting the freehold or leasehold
in the purchaser of mortgaged property has been duly made
in accordance with the provisions of this Ordinance, he
shall give effect thereto and issue the necessary transfer
certificate of title as if an application therefore together
with all the necessary documents had been presented to him
in accordance with the provisions of the General Registry
Rules, 1954."
At the
same time Section 81 of the Law of Property Ordinance was
amended to include subsection (2) as follows:
"Section
81 (2) A mortgagee shall not exercise his power of sale under
section 68A of this Ordinance unless and until -
(a)
notice in writing requiring payment of the mortgage money
has been served on the mortgagor or one or two or more mortgagors,
and default has been made in payment of the money, or of
part thereof, for three months after such service; or
(b)
some interest or instalement of principal money due under
the mortgage is in arrears and unpaid for fourteen days
after the same became due; or
(c)
there has been a breach of some covenant contained in the
mortgage deed or of some provision of this Part of this
Ordinance, and on the part of the mortgagor, or of some
person concurring in making the mortgage, to be observed
or performed, other than a covenant for payment of the mortgage
money; and
(d)
he has given least two months notice of his intention to
exercise his power of sale by publication thereof in three
issues of the Gazette and of one newspaper circulating in
the country."
The mortgage
deed purports to exclude the whole of Section 81, including
subsection (2). The question which arises is whether you can
contract out this subsection. My initial reaction is that
you cannot. I am conscious that in Fisher & Lightwood's
Law of Mortgage at p. 307 to somewhat similar provision under
the Law of Property Act 1925, Section 103 says:
"These
restrictions on the exercise of the statutory power may
be, and commonly are, modified or exclude"
The author
does not deal with the question of whether they are capable
of being excluded nor does he quote any legal decision for
his views. Counsel has referred me to Alliance Building Society
v Shave (1952) 1 CH. at p. 586 in support of contracting out.
That authority was not dealing with this specific issue. In
fact Fisher & Lightwood published in 1969 does not refer
to it as authority for contracting out.
On this
point I derive some assistance from Maxwell on the Interpretation
of Statutes for the quotation at p.378:
"Where
in an act there is no express prohibition against contracting
out of it, it is necessary to consider whether the act is
one which is intended to deal with private rights only,
or whether it is an act which is intended, as a matter of
public policy, to have a more extensive operation."
Taking
into account that the Courts of Equity have always mitigated
the harshness of the common law, and the fact that originally
a mortgagee had to come to Court to be able to sell the property
mortgaged, I am opinion that the intention of the Legislature
was to make Section 81 (2) mandatory and not capable of being
contracted out. The whole purpose of advertising in three
issues of the Gazette and in a newspaper is to bring to the
attention of persons interested, i.e. second mortgagee etc.,
that a sale is going to take place.
This issue
does not arise directly in this case as the sale was conducted
in accordance with subsection (2) of Section 81, so I will
not set a precedent.
It is
not in dispute that the mortgagor, Playa del Sol Ltd., defaulted
in its payments and that the Plaintiff purported to sell the
mortgaged property pursuant to his power of sale under the
mortgage deed.
There
is some dispute as to whether the mortgagee refused an offer
of repayment by the mortgagor, but nothing arises out of that
because at no time did the mortgagor either deposit the money
owing in Court or in a Bank in the name of the mortgagee.
Before the mortgagor can apply to redeem his equity he has
to tender the mount, not just offer it.
A sale
took place sometime in April 1978. It is sufficient to say
that the mortgagee sold the property to a company, EZE. Incorporated
for whom the mortgagee himself acted, for $5000 U.S. A property
worth at least $200,000 U.S. sold for $5000 U.S.! The evidence
is such that there is no unanimity as to whether the sale
was by auction or private treaty or whether any money passed
between buyer and seller.
Although
the property was sold and transferred, it has never been registered
under Section 68A(4). I am not surprised. The Registrar would
have been quite entitled to refuse registration.
The mortgagee
is now applying to this court for an equitable remedy, a mandatory
injunction, compelling the mortgagor to transfer the Certificate
of title and asking for $232,325.75 U.S. as being principal
and interest due up to date of sale.
The law
on this aspect of the case is set out clearly in Snell on
Equity, 27th Edition at p.398, where the case of Cuckmere
Brick Co. Ltd.v Mutual Finance Ltd. (1971) CH 949 is quoted.
It reads
"The
sale must be a true sale. A purported sale by a motrgagee
to himself, whether directly or though an agent, is no sale
at all, and must be disregarded."
The relevant
passage from the case cited is:
"A
mortgagee is not a trustee for sale; the power is given
to him for his own benefit, and if he exercises it bona
fide, without corruption or collusion with purchaser, the
court will not interfere even though the timing of the sale
be very disadvantageous to the mortgagor."
And further
on :
"He
must take reasonable care to obtain the true market value
of the property at the time he chooses to sell it."
There
is another case on the point. Mr. Justice Joyce in the case
of Hodson v Deans (1903) 647 at p.652, expresses himself in
this manner:
"It
is true that a mortgagee is not a trustee for sale in the
ordinary sense. He has right of his own, but he is under
certain obligations to the mortgagor, especially where the
security is ample."
The judge's
finding in that case are particularly illuminating and germane
to the case now before me. He says:
"Upon
the evidence in this case I find as a fact that the property
was sold at an undervalue, not of itself so great as to
invalidate the sale, but still at an undervalue
..
Fraudulent conspiracy amongst all the defendants has not
been proved, but the result of the evidence has been to
make me distrust all the persons who were mixed up in the
sale. I think that the plaintiff has not been fairly and
honestly dealt with
. Upon the admitted
facts the case was one of grave suspicion, and that suspicion
has not been lessened by what has transpired in the course
of the trial. I do not think that everything has been fairly
and bona fide, and the sale must be set aside."
This Court
is not prepared to give the Plaintiff any assistance on the
basis that 'he who comes to equity must come with clean hands'
I have
no doubt that the sale was a sham. True it purported to be
a sale conducted by a solicitor, but it is obvious that the
market price for the property was not obtained. The Plaintiff
blames his solicitor, and he might or might not be to blame,
but this does not exonerate the Plaintiff. It is his responsibility
to take reasonable care, and he cannot hide behind an agent,
his solicitor. If he has been mislead or wrongly advised by
his solicitor he might be able to take such steps against
him as he may be advised.
The law
on the matter is set out clearly in Snell on Equity and in
Cuckmere Co. Ltd. v Mutual Finance Ltd.
I find
as a fact that the property was sold at a grossly undervalued
price and sold to a company which was managed or controlled
by the mortgagee. It was no sale.
I find
that the Plaintiff is nonetheless entitled to his principal
and interest up to the time of sale, but no more. He is in
fact not claiming more although the sum actually claimed appears
to me to be grossly inflated. There is no need to order an
account to be taken, as there is evidence to arrive at the
appropriate figure. The mortgage was entered into on the 29th
April, 1972, and the property was sold in April, 1978 (the
exact date is not known). Let us say 6 years. I make the total
interest $75,000 U.S. So the sum actually owed was $125,000
U.S. less whatever sum was paid. I make it $118,250. U.S.
on rough estimate. The defendant himself admits it amount
to $119,294.25 U.S.
On payment
of that amount, not just an offer to pay, the Defendant would
be entitled to his equity of redemption. I think the Defendant
should be given a month as from today to make up his mind.
If he defaults, the Plaintiff would be at liberty to once
more exercise his power of sale, to apply to the court for
an order of sale, or to foreclose, or to take any other legal
remedy. Needless to say at the expiration of one month the
interest would start to accrue once again.
In other
words I am giving to the Defendant the declaration sought
in their Counterclaim. I dismiss their claim for damages as
I am not satisfied that there was ever a legal tender of the
money due.
I give
judgment for the Plaintiff in the sum of $119,294.25 U.S.
I would
like to hear Counsel on the question of costs,
After
hearing Counsel on both sides I order that each party should
bear his own costs.
----------OO----------
|