KWAN KWOK KWONG & ANOR V. TRENOLO
RESOURCES SDN BHD
HIGH COURT MALAYA, MUAR
JEFFREY TAN J
[ORIGINATING MOTION NO: 24(L) 709-1999]
29 JUNE 2000
LAND LAW:
Housing developers - Sale and purchase agreement - Land subject to
encumbrance - Whether land "discharged" from encumbrance upon payment of
full purchase price
JUDGMENT
Jeffrey Tan J:
After submissions by learned counsel, this has now become the plaintiffs'
application, by this originating summons (encl. 2) dated 20 November 1999,
for the court's adjudication on the following agreed issue:
Whether the provisions of the agreement dated 1.6.1995 between the
Plaintiffs and Defendant, and in particular clauses 1, 13, 15, 20 and 23,
permit the Defendant to use and or encumber the subject property purchased
by the Plaintiffs from the Defendant until the issuance of the strata
title to the subject property or only until full payment of the purchase
price.
The background facts, narrated by Mr Lim Hwah Beng for the plaintiffs and
then most affably confirmed by Mr Allen Yu for the Defendant, may be
rephrased as follows. By an agreement (agreement) dated 1 June 1995 and
entered into between the defendant as vendor of the one part and the
plaintiffs as purchasers of the other part, the defendant sold and the
plaintiffs purchased a commercial unit (hereinafter referred to as the said
parcel) known as parcel No. 59, Storey 1 contained in a commercial complex
known as Wira Court now erected on land known HS (D) 16797 PTD 10039 Mukim
of Simpang Kanan, District of Batu Pahat (hereinafter referred to as the
said land). By 18 December 1996, the plaintiffs had fully paid up the
purchase price (RM258,432). Hitherto, the said land was charged already to
the United Merchant Finance Berhad (UMFB). The said land is still charged to
UMFB. Presently, Pengurusan Danaharta Nasional Berhad has acquired the
rights of UMFB. A strata title in respect of the said Parcel is yet to be
issued.
Mr Lim contented that the defendant, because of their failure to
discharge the parcel, had breached the agreement and therefore entitled the
plaintiffs in turn to terminate the agreement. In the affidavit (encl. 5)
affirmed on their behalf, "the defendant admitted that they had cash flow
problems and that the unit is still encumbered". "The defendant pleaded that
they would try to resolve their financial problems." "However", Mr Lim
added, "the defendant did not say that they would obtain a release of the
parcel". Mr Lim further contended that the defendant must give all rights
and all benefits of ownership of the said parcel to the plaintiff. "The
strata title can wait, but all other rights must be handed over." "The
underlying purpose of cl. 15 of the agreement was only bridging finance."
Disagreeing with the defendant who contended in para. 12 of encl. 5 that cl.
15 permitted the defendant to utilise the said parcel as a loan security
until the issuance of the strata title to the unit, Mr Lim added that cl. 15
only permitted the said parcel to be encumbered during the period of
construction, and whilst the purchase price was still not fully paid.
In his short submission, Mr Yu contended that the clauses of the
agreement cannot be enforced, because ss. 32 and 33 of the Contracts Act
1950 provide that a contingent contract to do or not do anything if an
uncertain event happens cannot be enforced by law unless and until that
event has happened, and not before. Then referring to s. 10 of the Strata
Titles Act 1985, Mr Yu said that strata titles could be applied, albeit that
there is a charge. Mr Lim replied that strata titles would not be obtained,
so long as there is a charge.
Obviously, to rule on the agreed issue, this court is required to
interpret or construct the agreement.
The process of interpretation starts by a consideration of the language
used by the parties in the document itself, to ascertain the meaning of the
words in the document and to determine (subject to any rule of law) the
legal effect or the effect to be given to those words (See Chatenay v.
The Brazilian Submarine Telegraph Co., Ltd. [1891] 1 QE 79, so as to
ascertain further "... the mutual intentions of the parties ... as to the
legal obligations each assumed by the contractual words in which they sought
to express them ... ." (Pioneer Shipping Lyd. v. B.T.P. Tioxide Ltd
[1982] AC 724 per Lord Diplock). The intention of parties is strictly the
meaning of the words they have used. "The suggestion of an intention of
parties different from the meaning conveyed by the words employed is no part
of interpretation, but is mere confusion" Great Western Railway v.
Bristol Corporation [1918] 87 LJ Ch 414 per Lord Shaw. Thus, in Re
Jodrell [1890] 44 Ch 590, Lord Halsbury said:
I do not know what the testator meant except by the words he has used
... . For myself, I am prepared to look at the instrument such as it is;
to see the language that is used in it; to look at the whole of the
document and not to part of it; and having looked at the whole of the
document to see, if I can, through the document what was in the mind of
the testator. Those are general principles for the construction of all
instruments and to that extent it may be said that they are canons of
construction.
The language used must be considered in the light of the surrounding
circumstances and the objects of the contract, in so far as it has been
agreed or proved. But it would be erroneous to assume an intention apart
from the language used in the instrument and bend the language in favour of
the assumed intention (Leader v. Duffey [1888] 13 App. Cas. 298, "to
construe an instrument contrary to what the words of the instrument itself
convey" (Smith v. Cooke [1891] AC 297 per Lord Halsbury), "to
introduce uncertainty by starting from the viewpoint of a general rule
governing such clauses, and then to resolve the question of construction by
reference to it ... (as it is) the court's task is to determine the meaning
of the provision, against its contractual and contextual sense" (S.P.A.
v. Tradax Ocean Transportation [1987] All ER 81), or "to construe and
apply not the clause which the parties have entered into but the different
clause which they might have ... entered into." (Equity & Law Life
Assurance Society plc v. Bodfield Ltd [1987] 281 EG 1448).
In attempting to ascertain the presumed intention of the parties, the
court will adopt an objective approach, that is to say that it will consider
what would have been the intention of reasonable persons in the position of
the actual parties to the contract. Thus in Reardon-Smith Line Ltd v.
Hansen-Tangen [1976] 1 WLR 989, Lord Wilberforce said:
When one speaks of the intention of the parties to the contract one
speaks objectively the parties cannot themselves give direct evidence of
what their intention was and what must be ascertained is what is to be
taken as the intention which reasonable people would have had if placed in
the situation of the parties.
The court is entitled to look at evidence of the actual factual
background known to the parties at or before the date of the contract;
accordingly, evidence of the surrounding circumstances (Kam Mah Theatre
Sdn. Bhd. v. Tan Lay Soon [1994] 1 CLJ 1), of the "genesis" and of the
"aim" of the transaction, limited however to objective facts, to place the
contract in its correct setting the factual matrix is admissible. Thus in
Ipswich Diocesan Board of Finance v. Clark (No. 2) [1975] 1 WLR 468, Sir
John Pennycuick, delivering the judgment of the English Court of Appeal,
said:
It is no doubt true that in order to construe an instrument one looks
first at the instrument and no doubt one may form a preliminary impression
on such inspection. But it is not until one has considered the instrument
and the surrounding circumstances in conjunction that one concludes the
process of construction.
However, the court may not look at the subsequent conduct of the parties
to interpret a written contract unless that conduct amounted to a variation
of the contract or gave rise to an estoppel (James Miller and Partners
Ltd. v. Whitworth Street Estates (Manchester) Ltd [1970] AC 583.)
Words are construed, in their grammatical and ordinary sense, unless that
would lead to some absurdity, or some repugnance or inconsistency with the
rest of the instrument, in which case the grammatical and ordinary sense may
be modified, so as to avoid that absurdity and inconsistency, but no further
(Grey v. Pearson [1857] 6 HL Cas 61 per Lord Wensleydale); the
ordinary meaning of a word is its meaning in its plain, ordinary and popular
sense, unless the context points out some special and particular sense (Robertson
v. French [1803] 4 East 130). In the case of a word with both an
ordinary and a specialised meaning, the popular meaning will prevail unless
it is proved first that the parties intended to use the word in the
specialised sense.
There is a general presumption against implying terms into written
contracts. Rather, the presumption is that parties who have entered into
written engagements with written stipulations have expressed all the
conditions by which they intended to be bound under the instrument (Aspdin
v. Austin [1844] 5 QB 671; Luxor (Eastborne) Ltd v. Cooper [1941]
AC 108) and care must be taken not to make a contract speak where it was
intentionally silent (Churchward v. R [1865] LR 1 QB 173). The
presumption against adding terms is stronger where the contract is a written
contract which represents an apparently complete bargain (Duke of
Westminster v. Guild [1985] QB 688).
Where the bargain is obviously not complete, the court may imply the
missing terms if the following criteria (some of which may overlap) set by
Lord Simon of Glaisdale in B.P. Refinery (Westernport) Pty. Ltd v. Shire
of Hastings [1978] 52 AJLR 20 are fulfilled:
(i) if it is reasonable (Young and Marten Ltd v. McManus Childs Ltd
[1969] 1 AC 454) and equitable (B.P Refinery (Westernport) Pty. Ltd v.
Shire of Hastings [1978] 52 AJLR 20),
(ii) if it is necessary to give business efficacy to the contract (The
Moorcock [1889] 14 PD 64),
(iii) if it is obvious (Shirlaw v. Southern Foundries (1926) Ltd
[1939] 2 KB 206),
(iv) if it is capable of clear expression (Shell U.K. Ltd v. Lostock
Garage Ltd [1976] 1 WLR 1187);and
(v) if it is not inconsistent with the express terms of the contract or
its general tenor (Lynch v. Thorne [1956] 1 WLR 303).
A court, subject to the qualification that there is absent a contrary
intention, would be more ready to imply a term in cases "where a special
relationship such as those recognised by the law exists" (eg, banker and
client, employer and employee, principal and agent, vendor and purchaser of
immovable property, landlord and tenant) than in cases where no such special
relationship exsists, "in order to make the particular relationship
workable" (Datuk Yap Pak Keong v. Sababumi (Sandakan) Sdn. Bhd.
[1997] 1 CLJ 23 at p. 54, per Gopal Sri Ram JCA).
In general, a term is necessarily implied in a contract that neither
party shall actively prevent the other from performing it, which itself is a
breach of the contract. The classic formulation of that implied term is that
of Cockburn CJin Stirling v. Maitland [1864] 5 B&S 841:
I look on the law to be that if a party enters into an arrangement
which can only take effect by reason of the continuance of a certain state
of circumstances, there is an implied engagement on his part that he shall
do nothing of his own motion to put an end to that state of circumstances,
under which alone that arrangement can be operative.
There is also imposed on parties a general duty to co-operate in the
performance of a contract. The duty includes a duty not to prevent the
fulfilment of conditions (see Mackay v. Dick [1881] 6 App. Cas 251,
where the buyer refused to give a machine a proper trial, and the House of
Lords held it was a breach of contract) and to act bona fide (perhaps
reasonably), where the condition to be fulfilled is one which is dependent
on the discretion of one party to the contract, to procure the fulfilment of
the condition (Hudson v. Buck [1877] 7 Ch. D. 683).
To arrive at the true interpretation of a document, a clause must not be
read in isolation, but must be considered in the context of the whole of the
document (Chamber Colliery Ltd v. Twyerould (1893) [1915] 1 Ch 268;
Re: Jodrell(supra)). As a corollary of the principle that a document
must be construed as a whole, all parts of it must be given effect where
possible (Re Strand Music Hall Co. Ltd [1895] 35 Beav 153) and no
part of it should be treated as inoperative or surplus (S.A. Maritime et
Commerciale of Geneva v. Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. Ltd [1954] 1 WLR 492)
unless it is impossible to reconcile it with another and more express clause
in the same deed (Re Strand Music Hall Co. Ltd (supra)).
But the two most important and comprehensive rules of general application
in construing a written instrument are: (i) that it shall, if possible, be
so interpreted ut res valeat potius quam pereat, and, (ii) that such
a meaning shall be given to it as to carry out and effectuate to the fullest
extent the intention of the parties. Put together, benigne faciendae sunt
interpretationes ut res magis valeat quam pereat, the rule is that a
liberal construction should be put upon written instruments, so as to uphold
them, if possible, and carry into effect the intention of the parties. Every
document ought to be construed, if possible, so as to make it operative. "It
boils down to this. Where a contract is couched in unambiguous language, the
court must give effect to it. But where the terms of a contract are
ambiguous then the court may imply a term in order to uphold the
transaction" (Datuk Yap Pak Leong v. Sababumi (supra) at p. 53 per
Gopal Sri Ram JCA).
The pertinent clauses, so it was agreed, of the agreement, read as
follows:
Clause 1 Sale And Purchase Of Property
The Vendor hereby agrees to sell and the Purchaser hereby agrees to
purchase the said Parcel free of all encumbrances other than those imposed
by the provisions of the Agreement and the conditions expressed and
implied in the separate strata title to the said Parcel when issued,
subject to the terms and conditions hereinafter contained and the special
conditions (if any) contained in the Fourth Schedule hereto.
Clause 13 - Issue Document Of Title
The Vendor shall at its own costs and expense obtain issue of a
separate strata title to the said Parcel but any delay in obtaining such
separate strata title shall not be a ground for any delay by the Purchaser
in the payment on due dates of any of the instalments of the Purchase
Price set out in the Third Schedule Hereto and the interest thereon (if
any) and the Vendor shall not in any way be liable to the Purchase for any
loss, damages cost, fee or expenses howsoever arising or incurred due to
any delay in the issue of the separate strata title to the said to Parcel.
Clause 15 - Consent To Encumber
(1) The Purchaser hereby do irrevocably consent that the Vendor may
charge or in anyway encumber the said Parcel provided always that
nothing shall release the Vendor of its obligations to transfer the said
Parcel free of all registrable encumbrances in accordance with Clause 1
of this Agreement.
(2) The Purchaser shall not encumber the said Parcel including the
lodging or the causing of the lodging of a caveat on the said land or
any part thereof in default of which the Purchaser shall indemnify and
keep safe the Vendor against any costs, fees, expenses, damages, claims
proceedings, demands or actions arising therefrom.
Clause 20 - Delivery Of Vacant Possession
Subject to Clause 31 hereof or of any delay by whatsoever reasons owing
to the Purchaser and provided always that the Purchaser shall have paid to
the Vendor all instalments and monies payable under this agreement as and
when they become due, the said Parcel shall be completed by the Vendor and
vacant possession shall be handed over to the Purchaser within thirty-six
(36) months from the date of this agreement and if the Parcel is not
completed and ready for delivery of vacant possession to the Purchaser
agreed liquidated damages calculated from day to day at the rate of ten
per cent (10%) per annum on such part of the Purchase Price of the said
Parcel as shall have been paid to the Vendor from such date of expiry of
the said thirty-six (36) months to the date of actual completion and
delivery of vacant possession of the said Parcel to the purchaser shall be
paid by the Vendor.
Clause 23 - Transfer of Parcel
The Vendor shall upon the issuance of the document of title to the said
Parcel and provided that the Purchaser shall have paid all monies under
clause 3 hereof in accordance with the Third Schedule Hereto and all
interest and all other monies whatsoever due under this Agreement and
shall have performed and observed all the terms and conditions of this
agreement, execute a valid and registrable transfer of the said Parcel in
favour of the Purchaser his heir or permitted lawful assignee, as the case
may be, free from all encumbrances other than those imposed by the
provisions of this Agreement and the conditions expressed and implied in
the separate strata title to the said Parcel.
Looking at the agreement as a whole, it is most evident that the
intention of the plaintiffs was to buy whilst the intention of the defendant
was to sell the said parcel. Put differently, it was the intention of the
parties, in the case of the defendant to liquidate the said parcel for
money, and in the case of the plaintiffs to exchange money for the said
parcel. That mutual exchange was at the heart and soul of the bargain. And
all provisions of the agreement functioned, so it must be, to implement and
to see through that bargain. The provisions of the agreement, or any of
them, were not there to defeat that bargain. For it is just not logical that
there could be an agreement to break the very same agreement. As said, the
provisions of the agreement must be read ut res valeat potius quam pereat,
to uphold the bargain, if possible, and to carry into effect and not defeat
the bargain.
Essentially, the sum total of the contractual obligation of the
plaintiffs was to pay the full purchase price. And that, it was agreed, the
plaintiffs had performed.
"Where a purchaser under a contract of sale had paid the full purchase
price and entered into possession of the land under an expectancy of title,
the courts have held that the purchaser was the equitable owner of the land
whose rights as against the vendor to have the full title to the land
formally transferred to him could not be lost by reason of mere delay or
laches" (Teo Keang Sood and Khaw Lake Tee, Land Law in Malaysia, Cases
and Commentary 2nd edn pp. 202-203). As a rule, that is unless otherwise
provided, a vendor of immovable property free from encumbrances is obliged,
immediately upon his receipt of the full purchase price from the purchaser,
to convey the full benefits of both the legal and beneficial ownership of
the immovable property to the purchaser. Inter alia, that vendor is
obliged to execute and deliver a good and registrable memorandum of transfer
of the immovable property free from encumbrances together with the document
of title to the purchaser. Indeed, "one of the main obligations of a vendor
under a contract for the sale of land is to give a purchaser a title 'free
from all encumbrances'. The effect of such an obligation is to ensure that
the purchaser on registration, acquires a title with no existing
encumbrances which would in any way fetter the purchaser's right to deal
with the land subsequently or which would affect the purchaser's enjoyment
of the land" (Sale and Purchase of Real Property in Malaysia by Visu
Sinnadurai at p. 186). "A vendor is under a general duty to deliver a title
free from all encumbrances on the date for completion and not on the date
the contract was entered into. It is therefore, quite possible for a vendor
to deal with the land during this interim period with the understanding that
any such encumbrance on the land would be discharged on the date for
completion" (Sale and Purchase of Real Property in Malaysia ibid at
p. 187). And it was no different in the present case, although the strata
title was yet not issued.
Now the plaintiffs entered into the agreement knowing fully well, for the
2nd and 4th recitals to the agreement disclosed so, that the said land was
already charged and that the strata title to one the parcel was yet to be
applied, and therefore nowhere near yet to be issued. However, the
plaintiffs were required, by cl. 3 of the agreement, to pay the purchase
price in accordance with the completed stages of construction of the said
parcel, whilst the defendant was committed (cl. 20) to complete and deliver
vacant possession of the said parcel to the plaintiffs within 36 months.
Both parties agreed, in other words, that 36 months from the execution of
the agreement shall be the date for completion. But the matter of the
issuance of a strata title, even if applied for, was not a matter within the
defendant's control. And it could end up with the defendant not being able,
in spite of all efforts to obtain a strata title, to deliver the strata
title to the plaintiffs within those 36 months. For that reason, cl. 13
provided that "any delay in obtaining such separate strata title shall not
be a ground for any delay by the purchaser in the payment on due dates of
any of the instalments of the purchase price set out in the Third Schedule
hereto and the interest thereon (if any) and the vendor shall not in any way
be liable to the purchaser for any loss, damages cost, fee or expenses
howsoever arising or incurred due to any delay in the issue of the separate
strata title to the said parcel". Also for that reason, cl. 23 provided that
the defendants shall execute a valid and registrable transfer of the said
parcel "upon the issuance of the document of title to the said parcel". And
given the reality that the issuing authority might indeed delay the issuance
of a strata title, it was just fair to provide so. Clearly, cls. 13 and 23
were intended to protect the defendant from liability for any official delay
in the issuance of the strata title occasioned by the issuing authority.
Clauses 13 and 23 were not intended to shield the defendant from liability
for their own delay. Undoubtedly, if there was a document of title, cl. 13
would not have been required, and cl. 23 would not read as in the present
form. Rather, just as in cases of all dealings with document of titles, cl.
23 should read, to the effect, that the Defendant shall execute a valid and
registrable transfer of the said Parcel upon full payment of the purchase
price. Plainly, cls. 13 and 23 were so phrased, only to deal with the one
particular circumstance that there was no document of title. Clauses 13 and
23 were not to provide for an encumbrance created by the defendant until the
issuance of a document of title. Reasonably, that must be the construction
of cls. 13 and 23.
Granted, the paintiffs gave their consent, in the 1st limb of cl. 15(1)
of the agreement, to the creation of late charges by the defendant. But that
consent was not without condition. The rider to the 1st limb of cl. 15(1)
states, "Provided always that nothing shall release the (defendant) of its
obligations to transfer the said parcel free of all registrable encumbrances
in accordance with cl. 1 of this agreement". The agreement says, in clear
and unambiguous languange in cl. 1 of the agreement, that the defendant
agrees to sell and the plaintiff agree to purchase the said parcel free of
all encumbrances (meaning charges, caveats or other adverse claims) other
that those imposed by the provisions of the agreement (meaning the covenants
of the purchasers, common rights and liabilities, and like provisions) and
the conditions expressed and implied in the separate strata title to the
said parcel when issued (meaning the express conditions and restrictions of
interest imposed by the State Authority or by the National Land Code itself)
subject to the terms and conditions hereinafter contained and the special
conditions (if any) contained in the Fourth Schedule hereto (meaning the
position and area of the said parcel). The agreement says, in cl. 23 of the
agreement, that the defendant "shall execute a valid and registrable
transfer of the said parcel ... free from all encumbrances other than those
imposed by the provisions of this agreement and the conditions expressed and
implied in the separate strata title to the said parcel." Unquestionably,
the plaintiffs purchased the said parcel free from land charges. Beyond
question, the defendant must redeem the said parcel for the plaintiffs. Just
the execution of a valid and registrable memorandum of transfer was agreed
to be deferred, until the issuance of a document of title. Only the formal
transfer was deferred. Without a document of title, that was probably the
only solution. But other than formal registration, the plaintiffs were
entitled, upon payment of the full purchace price, to the full benefits of
both the legal and beneficial ownership of the said parcel. And the
exsisting encumbrance which could render the plaintiffs' legal and
beneficial ownership effectively or substantially worthless could be
"discharged", unlike the formal registration of the plaintiffs' title, even
without a document of title.
Without doubt, the provisions of the agreement do not permit the
defendant to use and or encumber the said parcel until the issuance of the
strata title, only until full payment of the purchase price. Lastly, costs
of this application is ordered, since the agreed issue is being answered in
favour of the plaintiff, by the defendant.
|