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Did participation in a mortgage fraud bar a negligence claim?

The court has long struggled with the enforceability of contracts involving illegality. It used to ask itself whether a claimant was relying on an illegal action to support a claim: Tinsley v Mulligan [1994] AC 240. But, following the Supreme Court decision in Patel v Mirza [2016] UKSC 42, the policy is now more flexible. The court must consider whether it would damage the integrity of the legal system to allow a claimant to pursue a claim.

Stoffel & Co v Grondona [2020] UKSC 42; [2020] PLSCS 196 concerned a property that was transferred to a new owner to further a mortgage fraud. The transferee entered into the transaction to enable the owner of the property, who had a poor credit history, to secure finance that would not otherwise have been available to him. But the parties had agreed that the transferor would continue to deal with the property as if it were his own – and that the transferee would be entitled to 50% of any profit made when the property was sold.

Instead, the transferor died, leaving the transferee liable on the mortgage that she had signed and without any legal title to the property – because the Land Registry had rejected her solicitors’ application to register the transfer into her name. Was the transferee able to claim damages from her solicitors, in contract and tort, for the failure to register the transfer? Or did the rules on illegality preclude any such claim?

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