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Australia New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Prasad [2013] FJHC 205; HBC24.2011S (29 April 2013)

IN THE HIGH COURT OF FIJI
AT SUVA
CIVIL JURISDICTION


Civil Action No: HBC 24 of 2011S.


IN THE MATTER of Land Transfer Act Section 109


AND


IN THE MATTER
of an application to remove Caveat No. 737425 lodged by Chandrika Prasad against Certificate of Title No. 10153, the property of Rameshwaran Nair and Raajeshwaran Nair.


BETWEEN:


AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LIMITED
a duly constituted banking corporation having its registered office in Melbourne, Australia and carrying on business in Suva and having branches throughout Fiji.
APPLICANT


AND:


CHANDRIKA PARASAD
of Jalim Avenue, Waila, Nausori.
RESPONDENT


BEFORE : Justice Deepthi Amaratunga

COUNSEL : Mr. B. Narayan for the Applicant

Mr. Vinay Sharma for the Defendant


Date of Hearing : 3rd June, 2011

Date of Decision : 29th April, 2013


DECISION


  1. INTRODUCTION
  1. This is an application filed by the mortgagee of the property for the removal of the caveat No 737425 filed by the Respondent who is the father-in-law of the mortgagor. The affidavit in opposition alleges that he had loaned some money to his son-in-law, who was the mortgagor of the property, in order to settle the outstanding arrears of loan account with the applicant. The property was on a mortgagee sale due to default of mortgage and it was sold to a successful tenderer. The mortgagor of the property was not successful in obtaining injunctive relief restraining the sale of the property. The application for injunction was struck off twice for non appearance and the reinstatement of the said motion seeking injunction was also dismissed and in the said decision it was held that the said mortgagor did not even establish an arguable case against the mortgagee. The Applicant-mortgagee entered in to a sale and purchase agreement with the prospective buyer, who had also lodged a caveat. At the time of hearing of this application there were four caveats lodged on the property including the caveat in this application. The wife of the mortgagor and the mortgagor had filed caveats and the prospective buyer of the property had also filed a caveat based on the sale and purchase agreement. Since there were three separate applications for the removals of the caveats filed by the mortgagor, his wife and his father-in-law all three hearings were done simultaneously, with the consent of the counsel as the same counsel appeared in all three matters for removal of said caveats. After the hearing of the removal of three caveats, the matters were adjourned for written submissions and was informed that all issues pertaining to these caveats and the caveat lodged by the prospective buyer could be resolved amicably, and the matters were adjourned for settlement of all the issues. Then a separate application was filed for the removal of the caveat lodged by the prospective buyer of the property from the mortgagee sale who had entered a sale and purchase agreement with the Applicant. The said buyer had also filed an action for specific performance upon the said sale and purchase agreement. The caveat lodged on the basis of said sale and purchase agreement was extended. The decisions on the removal of caveats heard on 3rd June, 2011 were adjourned with the request of the parties till a determination of extension of caveat lodged on the basis of sale and purchase agreement. After the delivery of the said decision I was informed by the applicant-mortgagee that its desire to proceed with the removals of the caveats which were already heard. I allowed the parties to file written submissions.
  1. ANALYSIS
  1. The affidavit in opposition had admitted paragraphs 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 of the affidavit in support of the removal of the caveat. In paragraph 8 of the affidavit in opposition the Respondent states as follows

'8. That paragraph 9 is admitted to the extend that I have a beneficiary interest (sic) by virture of equitable financial interest in the said property.'


  1. The Respondent had detailed in the said paragraph the instances on which he had granted loans to his son–in–law who mortgaged the property to the Applicant. The Respondent state that he was not paid of the loans granted to his son-in-law and state further in paragraph 8(e) as follows

'e) To this date, I am still waiting to be repaid, I caused a caveat to be placed on the property of Rameshwaran Nair and Raajeshwaran Nair to protect my own financial interest in the property.


In total, I gave three loans amounting to $35,000 to my son-in-law, Raajeshwaran Nair for the payment of his loan arrears with the Applicant on the understanding that when the arrears are paid off, the Applicant will in return arrange for the transfer of the property to by son in law and after which, he will start repaying me of the interest rate of 15% per annum.


Due to the Applicant not fulfilling its condition precedent of transferring the property to Raajeshwaran Nair after he had paid off the arrears I have unduly disadvantaged.'


  1. Out of the said $35,000 a sum of $7,000 was given to the daughter of the Respondent and he states that money was given by his daughter to her husband, who was the mortgagor for the repayment of the loan.
  2. What the Respondent has to establish is caveatable interest on the property. The mortgagee had conducted a mortgagee sale and a successful tenderer was selected as prospective buyer of the property and a sale and purchase agreement was entered between the Applicant –mortgagee and the prospective buyer who had also lodged a separate caveat based on the said sale and purchase agreement. The application for the removal of said caveat was heard and it was extended. The said caveator had filed a separate action for the specific performance of the said sale and purchase agreement. So, the said buyer of the property awaits the transfer of the property. The mortgagor of the property was not successful in obtaining a stay of the mortgagee sale and the said motion seeking injunctive relief was struck off twice and the High Court judge had held that the said mortgagor even failed to establish an arguable case against the applicant mortgagee.
  3. The 'caveatable interest' has to be described clearly, in the affidavit in opposition. The Respondent has not filed the said caveat which should have describe the caveatable interest, Neither party had produced the caveats to the court in order to ascertain the caveatable rights of the caveator. The Applicant had stated in its affidavit in support that it was not available at the moment they inquired it from the Registrar of the Title since it was handed over to the caveator for a correction. The burden of proof of caveatable interest is with the caveator and he had failed to do so by annexing the caveat to his affidavit in opposition.
  4. So, in reply to the lack of caveatable interest the Respondent is stating in his affidavit in opposition that the Respondent had given money to his daughter and also to the mortgagor of the property for the repayment of the loan of the Applicant –mortgagee. This had not created a caveatable interest. Section 109 of the Land Transfer Act states as follows

'109.-(1) Upon the receipt of any caveat, the Registrar shall give notice thereof to the person against whose application to be registered as proprietor of, or, as the case may be, to the registered proprietor against whose title to deal with, the land, estate or interest, the caveat has been lodged.


(2) Any such applicant or registered proprietor, or any other person having any registered estate or interest in the estate or interest protected by the caveat, may, by summons, call upon the caveator to attend before the court to show cause why the caveat should not be removed, and the court on proof of service of the summons on the caveator or upon the person on whose behalf the caveat has been lodged and upon such evidence as the court may require, may make such order in the premises, either ex parte or otherwise as to the court seems just, and, where any question of right or title requires to be determined, the proceedings shall be followed as nearly as may be in conformity with the rules of court in relation to civil causes.'


  1. The Applicant being the mortgagee has instituted this action in terms of Section 109(2) of the Land Transfer Act. In The Fiji National Provident Fund Board v Vivrass Holdings Limited and Registrar of Titles Office Justice Jitoko's decision of the High Court of Fiji at Suva Civil Action No. HBD 325D of 2002S in dealing with an application by the Plaintiff by originating summons under section 109 (2) of the Land Transfer Act for the First Defendant to show cause as to why the caveat lodged by the First Defendant should not be removed the Court held that "In order for the First Defendant to sustain its caveat, it must show that it has a caveatable interest in C.T.24128". (The said Fiji National Provident Fund Board case determined that the Fiji equivalent to New Zealand's section 146 (now NZ section 137 (a)), is section 106 of the Land Transfer Act).
  2. Justice Jitoko in the said case stated that the essential requirement in caveatable interest is that the right base on statute confers an estate or interest in land. It is this interest in land that gives a person the locus standi to caveat. It was quoted with authority "Guardian, Trust and Executors Company of New Zealand, Limited v. Hall [1938] NZLR 1020 at 1025 where it held in Gallan J's judgment as follows

"A caveat is the creature of statute and may be lodged only by a person upon whom a right to lodge it has been conferred by the statute. It is not enough to show that the lodging and continued existence of the caveat would be in some way advantageous to the Caveator. He must bring himself within section 146 of the Land Transfer Act."(emphasis is added)


  1. In Cambridge Credit (Fiji) Ltd v. W.F.G. Ltd Vol. 21 FLR 182 the Fiji Court of Appeal stated that section 106 is concerned with the protection of unregistered instruments in land, and added, (p.185).

"Section 106 of the Fiji Act is designed to protect unregister instruments in land. For instance an agreement for sale and purchase, an unregistered mortgage, an agreement to give a mortgage or an option to purchase land are just a few examples of unregistered instruments which are capable of being protected by the lodging of a caveat.'


  1. The Court of Appeal in the said case p 184 at paragraph [H]stated,

"That the respondent must however, bring itself within the provisions of section 106 and in order to do this must satisfy the Court that the following are fulfilled.


(1) That it is a person claiming to be entitled to or to be beneficially interested in any land estate or interest under the Act; and

(2) That it is so claiming by virtue of an unregistered agreement or other instrument or transmission or any trust expressed or implied or otherwise howsoever."
  1. The money lent to the mortgagor and or to his wife (who is the daughter of the Respondent) to repay the loan of the mortgagee will not create a caveatable interest as described by the Respondent in his affidavit in opposition. If so no mortgagee sale could be carried out since any person who alleges some money being loaned to a mortgagor to settle the arrears of the loan of the mortgagee could lodge a caveat preventing mortgagee sale. This is what had been partly achieved by the Respondent by lodging this caveat on the property which is subjected to a mortgage to the Applicant by the son-in-law of the Respondent. The property was already sold in mortgagee sale and the mortgagor was not successful in stalling the said mortgagee sale where the court held that he did not establish an arguable case against the applicant –mortgagee in order to obtain an injunctive relief.
  1. CONCLUSION
  1. The Applicant is the mortgagee of the property in issue. The mortgagor of the said property was the son in law of the Respondent. The alleged caveatable interest is the money given to the mortgagor and his wife to settle the loan account of the Applicant which was in arrears. This cannot be considered a caveatable interest. I have not been presented with the caveat of the Respondent, which should indicate the caveatable interest, and in the absence of that only interest are the allegations contained in paragraph 8 of the affidavit in opposition, which only deals with the money given to settle the loan account of the mortgagor with the Applicant mortgagee. The Respondent was unable to present with any case law that supports his alleged caveatable interest. This does not create a caveatable interest for the extension of the caveat. The Applicant –mortgagee had already conducted a successful mortgagee sale and had also entered in to a sale and purchase agreement. The balance of convenience rest heavily on the Applicant –mortgagee. The alleged interest of the Respondent is a loan and there is no irreparable loss due to removal of caveat. The caveat is removed forthwith. Considering the circumstances of the case I will not award cost.
  1. FINAL ORDERS
  1. The Caveat No 737425 lodged by the Respondent is removed.
  2. No costs.

Dated at Suva this 29th day of April, 2013.


.................................................
Justice Deepthi Amaratunga
High Court, Suva


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