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Lloyds & Scottish
Finance Ltd. v Modern Cars & Caravans
(Kingston) Ltd [1966] 1 QB 764
Facts: A camper van had been sold and bought in
rapid succession and Mercantile Credit obtained
judgment against Frederick Wood in the High
Court.
He did not pay and so a writ was issued and
sheriff's officers levied on a camper van. Shortly
after, Wood sold the van to the defendants, Modern
Cars and Caravans who sold it to the plaintiffs,
Lloyds & Scottish, who in turn sold it on HP to
a Mr Worsfold. The sheriffs seized the camper van
from Worsfold who then refused to pay Lloyds &
Scottish. They in turn sued Modern Cars for selling
them goods with a pre-existing sheriff's levy.
Modern Cars tried to defend the claim there was no
valid levy or the levy had been abandoned.
The analysis of taking possession and
abandonment which followed is the only part of the
judgment of interest.
The sheriff called at the caravan site where
Wood lived in the van with his family on April 14
1961. The sheriff, unable to remove the van or
remain in close possession tried to get Wood to
sign a walking-possession agreement which he
refused because his wife claimed ownership of the
van. The sheriff left the campsite leaving his
employer's details, notes of the judgment and the
creditor's solicitor as Wood said he wanted to
arrange payments on the judgment with them.
Mrs Wood made signed a formal claim to the van
and on May 4 interpleader proceedings were
begun.
The bailiff revisited the caravan site on April
18, 24th and 27th and on May 4th 5th and 8th. He
saw the van was still there and spoke to the Woods
about their negotiations with the judgment
creditor's solicitors. On May 10th, 12th and 15th
he visited but found no-one at home. On May 19th he
visited and found that the van had gone because
Modern Cars had taken it.
Judgment of Edmund Davies J:
"I turn to the first issue - namely, did Allison
(the sheriff's officer) ever seize the caravan in
execution before the sale by Wood? Whether seizure
has occurred is a question of fact, turning upon
the circumstances of each particular case, but
certain guiding principles have been evolved over
the years, and these are conveniently summarised in
Halsbury's Laws of England in this way:
"For an act of the sheriff or his bailiff to
constitute a seizure of goods, it is not necessary
that there should he any physical contact with the
goods seized; nor does such contact necessarily
amount to seizure. An entry upon the premises on
which the goods are situate, together with an
intimation of an intention to seize the goods, will
amount to a valid seizure, even where the premises
are extensive and the property seized widely
scattered, but some act must he done sufficient to
intimate to the judgment debtor or his servants
that a seizure has been made, and it is not
sufficient to enter upon the premises and demand
the debt. Any act which, if not done with the
authority of the court, would amount to a trespass
to goods, will constitute a seizure of them when
done under the writ.
In the light of the authorities cited in support
of this passage, I hold that on April 14h there was
a seizure by the sheriff's officer of the caravan
and its contents as against the judgment debtor. He
did not merely demand payment of the debt (as was
done in Nash v Dickinson but having entered and
told the debtor that he had come to levy execution
and read out his warrant, he handed him the written
intimation already referred to. Furthermore, he
offered for signature a "walking-possession"
agreement, and he warned Wood and his wife that the
caravan must not be moved. It is said that he
should have done more: that he should have asked
the Wood family to leave the caravan, and then
locked it up or towed it away. Such a submission is
unrealistic, for the Woods' refusal to sign the
agreement indicated clearly that they would not
have consented to the much more drastic course of
leaving; and had the officer proceeded to move the
caravan with the Wood family still inside, and
after Mrs. Wood had laid claim to its ownership, he
would have run a grave risk of involving the
sheriff in liability to pay damages for wrongful
execution, wrongful imprisonment and trespass
against the person, as occurred in Cave v Capel. It
would have been highly inconvenient (though, it
seems, physically possible) for him to have
remained in the caravan with its four occupants,
and he had no legal right to camp outside on the
caravan site. Having done what he did, he went
away. In my judgment, he departed after having
effectively seized the caravan and its contents. It
has been submitted that to do so after he had been
refused consent to walking-possession" indicates
that he never seized at all. But I interpret this
incident in quite a different way, for in my view
the fact that he requested such consent supports
the view that he was then levying execution.
Where, as here, a judgment debtor concurs in the
adverse claim of a third party to the goods, it
would in most cases be impossible to get the debtor
to agree to walking-possession. Then does it follow
that, in every such case, there can be no seizure
and no continuance thereof unless the sheriffs
officer remains throughout on the premises? I think
that question must be answered in the negative. In
Lumsden v Burnett, a case relevant mainly to the
issue of abandonment, distress was claimed to have
been levied on eight pairs of trousers which were
never actually taken into possession by the
sheriff's officer, he merely having obtained the
signature of the debtor's 13 - year-old daughter to
a "walking-possession" agreement, which was
manifestly worthless. The child had no authority to
sign this document, but it was nevertheless held
that the officer had effected execution and that it
had not been abandoned, although the most that the
officer did thereafter was to visit the premises
occasionally to see whether the goods had been
removed.
In In re: Cooper a sheriff's officer, intending
to levy execution on two caterpillar tractors, went
to the debtor's farm and there handed to an
employee two forms stating that execution had been
levied on the two tractors, although they were not
removed, and he also handed him two forms inviting
the debtor to agree to walking execution and then
left. Danckwerts J held that this constituted a
levying of execution.7 But the citation of
authorities could proceed indefinitely. I hold on
the facts of this case that on April 14h, 1961; the
sheriff's officer seized under the writ the caravan
and its contents.
Then was that seizure abandoned before the
defendants bought the caravan from Wood? This is
again a question of fact, and it is agreed that the
answer depends upon the intention of the sheriff's
officer, which is a matter of inference to be
deduced from the evidence as & whole. For the
defence, it is submitted that if a sheriffs officer
leaves the debtor's premises for any reason, he
abandons possession, and, certainly as against a
third party, the debtor's goods are thereafter free
from any encumbrance. More particularly, it is
submitted that, as far as outsiders are concerned,
seizure cannot be continued even by a
walking-possession agreement signed by the
debtor.
Reference must here he made to Bower v Hett,
where Lord Esher MR said:
In this case there was a seizure of goods by
the bailiff; but he went out of possession under an
arrangement with the judgment debtor that he might
at any time come in again and retake possession of
the goods. He was therefore out of possession."
I do not think that these words can be
interpreted as meaning that whenever an officer
leaves the debtor's premises he must in all cases
be regarded as having abandoned his seizure of the
debtor's goods, in so far as third parties are
concerned, and the decision must turn, as I think,
on the wording of the arrangement entered into
between the parties. In Ackland v Paynter Graham B
said: "I do not mean to lay down the general
proposition that a sheriff can in no case quit
possession without any qualification; but I should
consider, that to show it not an abandonment, he
ought to be able most clearly to account for it, as
being caused by some urgent necessity, and to give
very satisfactory evidence of that.
Bagshawes v Deacon affords an example of failure
by the sheriff to produce such satisfactory
explanation of going out of possession. It is to be
observed that A. L. Smith LJ gave the leading
judgment both in that case and in Lumsden v Burnett
to which reference has already been made, where
possession was held to continue notwithstanding
that the sheriff's officer had left the
premises.
Counsel for the defendants, relying upon Blades
v Arundale has submitted that, to he effective, the
seizure must be maintained by continued personal
possession. He submits that even a
"walking-possession" agreement signed by the
judgment debtor would not serve to avert
abandonment of the seizure as between the creditor
and a third party. Swann v Earl of Falmouth is
relevant to this latter submission as well as to
the question of what constitutes seizure. There a
landlord's agent entered the tenant's premises (a
wharf), walked around them and gave a written
notice that he had distrained certain goods lying
there for arrears of rent, and that unless the rent
was paid or the goods replevied within five days,
they would be sold, and he then went away.
Littledale J, after holding that there had been an
original seizure and no abandonment thereof,
continued:
"The case might have been different, had the
question arisen between the landlord and an
execution creditor, or a purchaser for valuable
consideration without notice, for the landlord
might, perhaps, he considered to have lost his
right as against third persons if he neglected to
give reasonable notice of it."
But in these days when "walking-possession"
agreements are such a common feature and have even
been encouraged in the case of county court
bailiffs by the Lord Chancellor's Department, it is
difficult to see why, if abandonment turns on
intention, any distinction should be drawn between
the judgment creditor and third parties, and there
are several reported cases where no such
distinction has been made. In my judgment, it is
one which cannot validly be made. There was either
abandonment of the seizure, or there was not.
In the present case, did the sheriff ever intend
to abandon the seizure made by his officer on April
14th? The evidence indicates that he did not. The
nine visits paid by his officer between that date
and the disappearance of the caravan, his reporting
of Mrs. Woods claim to the judgment creditor, and
his action in taking out the first interpleader
summons, all point unmistakably, in my view, to the
conclusion that at no time did he intend to abandon
the seizure. On the body of evidence I hold that in
fact no abandonment took place."
Outcome:
1. A valid levy can be made with effective
possession taken, without a signed
walking-possession agreement.
2. The levy must he protected from
abandonment.
3. Seizures without a signed possession
agreement are therefore possible, but the bailiff
must work at them diligently, making contact with
the debtor at least once.
4. Contrasting opinion to White v Chapple [1847]
when a sheriff's officer went out of possession of
seized goods for a very short while in order to get
a drink when another bailiff entered and
levied.
5. A child cannot sign a walking-possession
agreement. In England and Wales a Child is a person
under 18.
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