[2023] UKSC 34
On appeal from: [2021] EWCA Civ 1832
JUDGMENT
Smith and another (Appellants) v Royal Bank of Scotland plc (Respondent)
before
Lord Hodge, Deputy President
Lord Briggs
Lord Kitchin
Lord Hamblen
Lord Leggatt
4 October 2023
Heard on 12 January 2023
Appellant
Robert Weir KC
Jonathan Butters
(Instructed by Cheval Legal Ltd)
Respondent
John Taylor KC
Giles Robertson
(Instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP (Glasgow))
LORD LEGGATT (with whom Lord Briggs, Lord Kitchin and Lord Hamblen agree):
A.INTRODUCTION
What is the time limit for applying to the court for an order under section 140B of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 to remedy unfairness in the relationship between a creditor and a debtor? This question is raised by the two cases under appeal. Both are small claims brought against the Royal Bank of Scotland plc (“the bank”) by former credit card holders who were sold payment protection insurance (“PPI”) policies by the bank on which the bank received very large undisclosed commissions. In each case the claim was brought over 10 years after the PPI policy was terminated and the last payment relating to it was made, but less than six years after the claimant’s credit card agreement with the bank had ended. In each case the claimant was successful at a hearing before a district judge and on a first appeal. However, on second appeals by the bank to the Court of Appeal, where the two cases were heard together, the appeals were allowed and the claims were dismissed on the ground that the applicable time limit had expired before the proceedings were commenced. Because of the general importance of this issue, which potentially affects many other cases, permission was granted for a further appeal to the Supreme Court.
For the reasons given in this judgment, I would allow the appeal and restore the decision of the district judge in each case. In short, a claim for a remedial order under section 140B can be made at any time while the credit relationship said to be unfair to the debtor is continuing. The relevant relationship in these cases was the relationship arising out of the credit card agreement between the bank and the claimant, which continued after the PPI policy came to an end. The period of limitation begins to run only when the relationship ends and expires after six years. Each of these claims was brought within that period. So the claims are not time-barred.
B. THE CLAIMS
Although the details differ, the facts and timelines of these two cases are similar in all relevant respects.
Karen Smith
Karen Smith applied (successfully) for a credit card with the bank in January 2000. The same application form offered her PPI “to protect your … card payments in the event of death, accident, sickness or involuntary unemployment” and stated:
“We [ie the bank] strongly recommend you take out this cover. For cover just tick this box.”
Ms Smith did so. What the bank did not disclose was their financial interest in making this recommendation. In fact, well over 50% of the money paid for PPI did not go to the insurer but was retained as commission by the bank. Even to this day the bank has chosen not to reveal the exact size of its commission.
The customer was entitled to terminate the PPI policy at any time. Ms Smith did so in March 2006 and made her last payment relating to her PPI policy in April 2006. However, her credit card agreement with the bank continued for another nine years until 2015.
The bank never informed Ms Smith that it had received commission out of her PPI payments until February 2018, when it paid her back £529.80 under a redress scheme for PPI mis-selling established by the Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”). This payment was said to represent the commission received by the bank insofar as it exceeded 50% of the PPI premiums paid by Ms Smith, plus interest on the principal sum refunded.
In August 2019 Ms Smith issued a claim against the bank in the county court seeking relief under section 140B of the Consumer Credit Act 1974. The specific relief asked for was an order requiring the bank to repay all the money paid by Ms Smith for PPI under her credit agreement (less the sum already repaid under the FCA scheme), with interest. The hearing took place before District Judge Stone sitting in Bodmin and I endorse the tribute paid by the Court of Appeal to his exemplary written judgment. He upheld the claim and ordered the bank to pay £1,346.29 (inclusive of interest) plus costs. That decision was affirmed on appeal by the county court judge.
Derek Burrell
Derek Burrell entered into a credit card agreement with the bank and related PPI policy in April 1998. He terminated the PPI policy some 10 years later in March 2008, when his last payment relating to that policy was also made; but his credit card agreement with the bank continued for eleven more years until 2019. He was first told about the commission retained by the bank from his payments of PPI premium in December 2017, when he was repaid £855.07 (calculated in the same way as the sum paid to Ms Smith) by the bank under the FCA redress scheme. Like Ms Smith, Mr Burrell issued a claim in the county court in August 2019. The deputy district judge decided preliminary issues which included the issues still in dispute on this appeal in favour of Mr Burrell; and that decision was upheld on an appeal to the county court judge.
The decision of the Court of Appeal
On its appeal to the Court of Appeal in these cases the bank advanced two grounds of appeal. One was that, by reason of the transitional provisions which regulated the entry into force in 2007 of the relevant provisions of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, the claimants have no claim. The second ground was that the claims are in any event time-barred by section 9 of the Limitation Act 1980.
For reasons given by Birss LJ in a judgment with which Macur and Coulson LJJ agreed, the Court of Appeal rejected the first ground of appeal but upheld the second. The appeals were therefore allowed and the claims dismissed: [2021] EWCA Civ 1832, [2022] 1 WLR 2136.
The two issues argued before the Court of Appeal are raised again on this appeal. Before discussing them, I need to introduce the key legislative provisions.
C.THE LEGISLATION
The key provisions
Sections 140A-C were added to the Consumer Credit Act 1974 by the Consumer Credit Act 2006 and came into force on 6 April 2007. They replaced an earlier regime which gave the court power to re-open “extortionate credit bargains”. As Briggs LJ explained in Plevin v Paragon Personal Finance Ltd[2013] EWCA Civ 1658, [2014] Bus LR 553, para 52, the earlier regime was regarded as having been too technical, and as having set the bar for court intervention too high. The new scheme was intended to provide consumers with greater protection based on the concept of an “unfair relationship”.
So far as relevant, section 140A states:
The court may make an order under section 140B in connection with a credit agreement if it determines that the relationship between the creditor and the debtor arising out of the agreement (or the agreement taken with any related agreement) is unfair to the debtor because of one or more of the following—
any of the terms of the agreement or of any related agreement;
the way in which the creditor has exercised or enforced any of his rights under the agreement or any related agreement;
any other thing done (or not done) by, or on behalf of, the creditor (either before or after the making of the agreement or any related agreement).
In deciding whether to make a determination under this section the court shall have regard to all matters it thinks relevant (including matters relating to the creditor and matters relating to the debtor).
…
A determination may be made under this section in relation to a relationship notwithstanding that the relationship may have ended.”
“Unfair relationships between creditors and debtors
Section 140B(9) places the burden of proof on the creditor. It provides that, where “the debtor … alleges that the relationship between the creditor and the debtor is unfair to the debtor, it is for the creditor to prove to the contrary”. Section 140B(1) sets out a list of things which an order under section 140B may do. It gives the court a wide range of powers. The key provision for present purposes is section 140B(1)(a) whereby an order may “require the creditor … to repay (in whole or in part) any sum paid by the debtor … by virtue of the [credit] agreement or any related agreement ...”
Section 140C contains definitions of terms used in sections 140A and 140B. It is common ground in these cases that the credit card agreements were “credit agreements” as defined in section 140C and that the PPI policies were “related” agreements.
How the regime operates
It can be seen that, in dealing with a claim by a debtor under these provisions, the court is required to follow a two-stage process. The first stage is to determine whether the relationship between the creditor and the debtor arising out of the credit agreement is unfair to the debtor because of one or more of the matters specified in section 140A(1). If the court finds that the relationship is unfair for that reason, the court must then proceed to the second stage and decide what, if any, order to make, selecting from the list of options in section 140B(1).
Some further general points may be made which are apparent on the face of sections 140A-C.
First, under section 140A(1) it is not the fairness or otherwise of the credit agreement which the court must determine: it is whether the relationship between the creditor and the debtor arising out of the credit agreement (on its own or taken with any related agreement) is unfair to the debtor. A relationship, by its nature, extends over a period of time and may continue for as long as there is any sum payable or which will or may become payable under the credit agreement.
Second, the question to be determined under section 140A(1) is not whether the relationship between the creditor and the debtor was unfair to the debtor when the credit agreement was made or at some other time in the past. It is whether the relationship is unfair to the debtor, ie at the time when the determination is made. This is reinforced by section 140B(9), quoted at para 14 above, which is likewise framed in the present tense.
If nothing further had been said, it might have been thought impossible to make a determination of unfairness under section 140A if the relationship between the creditor and the debtor has ended before the hearing takes place. But this contingency is catered for by subsection (4). That provides that a determination may be made under section 140A in relation to a relationship “notwithstanding that the relationship may have ended”. The logical implication is that, in a case where the relationship has ended, although the court cannot decide whether the relationship is (currently) unfair to the debtor, it must do the closest thing and determine whether the relationship was unfair to the debtor at the time when it ended.
If section 140A(1) had required the court as the general rule to determine whether the relationship between the creditor and the debtor was unfair to the debtor at some past time (such as when the credit agreement was made or when money became payable or was paid by the debtor), then subsection (4) would have been unnecessary. Its inclusion in section 140A confirms that the use of the present tense in subsection (1) is deliberate and that, subject to the exception created by subsection (4), the requirement to determine whether the relationship “is” unfair to the debtor means what it says.
A third point which is apparent on the face of the provisions is the breadth and open-ended nature of the assessment required by section 140A. The court is not left entirely at large, as subsection (1) requires the court to decide whether the relationship is unfair to the debtor because of one or more of three specified matters. These three possible causes of unfairness are, however, extremely broad. They include not only (a) “any of the terms of the [credit] agreement or of any related agreement” and (b) “the way in which the creditor has exercised or enforced any of his rights under the agreement or any related agreement”, but also (c) “any other thing done (or not done) by, or on behalf of, the creditor (either before or after the making of the agreement or any related agreement)”. It would be hard to cast the possible causes of unfairness more broadly than this. What is more, subsection (2) makes it clear that there is no restriction on the matters to which the court may have regard in deciding whether the relationship is unfair to the debtor, provided only that the court thinks them relevant. Subsection (2) also makes it clear that, if any matter is thought relevant, the court not only can but must have regard to it. The breadth of the matters that may be thought relevant is illustrated by a list of examples given by Hamblen J in Deutsche Bank (Suisse) SA v Khan[2013] EWHC 482 (Comm), para 346.
Fourth, the descriptions of the possible causes of unfairness in section 140A(1)(a)-(c) demonstrate that, for the purpose of deciding whether the relationship is now (or was when it ended) unfair to the debtor, the court must consider the whole history of the relationship - going back not only to the making of the credit agreement but to any relevant act or omission of the creditor before the making of that agreement or any related agreement. This is so without any limit on how long ago the credit agreement or any related agreement was made. The matters to which the court is obliged to have regard under subsection (2) because it thinks them relevant are likewise not limited in time.
This is an important point to bear in mind when considering the time bar defence asserted by the bank in this case. As I noted in Patel v Patel [2009] EWHC 3264 (QB), [2010] 1 All ER (Comm) 864, para 64, in a passage approved by the Court of Appeal (Kitchin LJ, with whom Underhill and Moore-Bick LJJ agreed) in Scotland v British Credit Trust Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 790, [2014] Bus LR 1079, para 82:
“… in determining whether, at the relevant date, the relationship is or is not unfair, the court is required to have regard to certain matters specified in section 140(A)(1) and to all other matters it thinks relevant, whenever those matters occurred. There is no possibility, therefore, if the court is entitled to make the determination of fairness at all and is not barred by limitation from doing so, of restricting the temporal scope of the inquiry.”
Fifth, as well as requiring the court to make a very broad and holistic assessment to decide whether the relationship between the creditor and the debtor is unfair to the debtor, the legislation also gives the court, where a determination of unfairness is made, the broadest possible remedial discretion in deciding what order, if any, to make under section 140B. Section 140B gives the court an extensive menu of options from which to select but says nothing at all about how this selection may or should be made. On the face of the legislation the court’s discretion is entirely unfettered. It is, I think, clear that the court is not in these circumstances required to engage in the kind of strict analysis of causation, loss and so forth that would be required, for example, in deciding what remedy to award in a claim founded on the law of contract or tort. Some constraint is, however, imposed by consideration of the general purpose of an order under section 140B. In principle, the purpose must be to remove the cause(s) of the unfairness which the court has identified, if they are still continuing, and to reverse any damaging financial consequences to the debtor of that unfairness, so that the relationship as a whole can no longer be regarded as unfair.
Plevin v Paragon Finance
This last point is confirmed by the decision of this court in Plevin v Paragon Personal Finance Ltd[2014] UKSC 61, [2014] 1 WLR 4222, a case which, like the present cases, involved the non-disclosure of commissions received out of premiums paid for PPI cover. The claimant had borrowed money to pay off existing debts and fund some home improvements. The loan, which had a 10-year term, was arranged by a broker who recommended PPI. The PPI premium was all paid upfront and added to the amount of the loan. Of the PPI premium, 71.8% was taken in commissions by the broker and the lender. The claimant was told that commission was paid but not the amount of the commission nor who received it.
During the period of the loan the claimant brought proceedings against the lender which included an allegation that her relationship with the lender was unfair within section 140A(1)(c) of the 1974 Act because of the non-disclosure of the amount of the commission. On an appeal to the Supreme Court, the claimant succeeded on this issue. Lord Sumption (with whom the other Justices agreed) said, at para 18:
“Any reasonable person in her position who was told that more than two thirds of the premium was going to intermediaries, would be bound to question whether the insurance represented value for money, and whether it was a sensible transaction to enter into. The fact that she was left in ignorance in my opinion made the relationship unfair.”
Lord Sumption then considered whether this unfairness was due to anything “done (or not done) by, or on behalf of, the creditor” so as to fall within section 140A(1)(c). There was nothing which the creditor had positively done to cause the unfairness, so the question was whether the unfairness resulted from the creditor’s failure to do something. On this point Lord Sumption said, at para 19:
“Bearing in mind the breadth of section 140A and the incidence of the burden of proof according to section 140B(9), the creditor must normally be regarded as responsible for an omission making his relationship with the debtor unfair if he fails to take such steps as (i) it would be reasonable to expect the creditor or someone acting on his behalf to take in the interests of fairness, and (ii) would have removed the source of that unfairness or mitigated its consequences so that the relationship as a whole can no longer be regarded as unfair.”
Applying this test, Lord Sumption considered that, given the size of the commissions paid and their potential significance for the claimant’s decision whether to purchase PPI cover, it would have been reasonable to expect the lender in the interests of fairness to have disclosed to her the amount of the commissions. Had this been done, this source of unfairness would have been removed because the claimant would then have been able to make a properly informed judgment about the value of the PPI policy (para 20). The Supreme Court concluded that this was a sufficient reason to justify reopening the transaction and remitted the case to the county court to decide what, if any, remedial order to make under section 140B.
D.THE TIME BAR ISSUE
In the light of the judgment in Plevin, the bank does not dispute that in each of the present cases its failure to disclose the commissions that it received made its relationship with the claimant arising out of the credit agreement (taken with the related PPI agreement) unfair to the claimant. In the case of Karen Smith, the district judge made a finding of fact that she would not have applied for PPI cover if she had known that more than half of her monthly payments would be kept as commission by the bank. The bank cannot and has not sought to challenge that finding. The bank also does not dispute that, if the court was entitled to make an order under section 140B(1)(a) for the repayment of money, the order made requiring the bank to repay all the sums paid for PPI by Ms Smith (insofar as they had not been repaid already), with interest, was an order which the court was entitled to make.
The main argument made by the bank is that the claims are barred by section 9 of the Limitation Act 1980. This provides:
An action to recover any sum recoverable by virtue of any enactment shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued. …”