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Steel and another v NRAM Ltd (formerly NRAM plc)

Solicitor – Duty of care – Careless misrepresentation – Respondent bank seeking damages for loss arising from reliance on statements by appellant solicitor in email concerning property transaction – Respondent allegedly misled into discharging security over all properties owned by claimant’s client when only one property eligible for release from security – Judge concluding appellant owed no duty of care to respondent when making erroneous statements – Appeal court allowing appeal against that decision – Whether appellant owing duty to opposite party – Appeal allowed

In 1997, a company (HCL) purchased Cadzow Business Park in Hamilton, Scotland comprising four commercial units. The respondent bank granted HCL an “all sums due” standard security over the property and a floating charge over all of its assets. In 2005, HCL sold one of the units and agreed to release that unit from the standard security and the proceeds of the sale were applied to reduce HCL’s overall indebtedness to the respondent. In May 2006, HCL instructed the first appellant solicitor to act on its behalf in relation to the sale of a further unit. The respondent e-mailed HCL confirming that it would accept £495,000 from the sale of the unit in reduction of HCL’s loan and that e-mail was forwarded by HCL to the first appellant.

The first appellant sent an e-mail to the respondent attaching two discharges in respect of the standard securities held by the respondent over all three remaining units. That was an error since she should only have restricted the security rather than discharging it completely. Her e-mail stated: “I also attach discharges for signing and return … as the whole loan is being paid off for the estate and I have a settlement figure for that”. The respondent was unrepresented in respect of the transaction. The discharges were executed on the respondent’s behalf and returned to the first appellant who subsequently registered them. The fact that the security had been discharged went unnoticed by the respondent until 2010 when HCL went into liquidation.

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