ARTICLE
19 August 2016

Litigation After A Loan Sale – The Substitution Of Plaintiffs Following A Loan Portfolio Acquisition

M
Matheson

Contributor

Established in 1825 in Dublin, Ireland and with offices in Cork, London, New York, Palo Alto and San Francisco, more than 700 people work across Matheson’s six offices, including 96 partners and tax principals and over 470 legal and tax professionals. Matheson services the legal needs of internationally focused companies and financial institutions doing business in and from Ireland. Our clients include over half of the world’s 50 largest banks, 6 of the world’s 10 largest asset managers, 7 of the top 10 global technology brands and we have advised the majority of the Fortune 100.
The recent Court of Appeal decision in Stapleford Finance Limited v Lavelle(1) has confirmed that, where the underlying loan has been acquired, the substitution of the purchaser as plaintiff in...
Ireland Litigation, Mediation & Arbitration

The recent Court of Appeal decision in Stapleford Finance Limited v Lavelle 1 has confirmed that, where the underlying loan has been acquired, the substitution of the purchaser as plaintiff in existing proceedings relating to the loan is permissible. This will be of comfort to the purchasers of loan portfolios from financial institutions, a practice that has increased significantly in the Irish Banking sector in recent times.

Decision

Matheson acted for Stapleford Finance Limited (“Stapleford”) who purchased loans from Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (In Special Liquidation) (“IBRC”), including those of the Defendant, Mr Lavelle. Stapleford wished to be substituted in as sole plaintiff in place of IBRC in proceedings IBRC had issued against the defendant prior to the loan sale.

In the High Court, Baker J held that the Rules of the Superior Courts (the “Rules”) allowed the substitution of Stapleford for IBRC. The decision was appealed by the defendant to the Court of Appeal.

On appeal, the defendant argued that the Rules should be given a narrow interpretation and that substitution should be confined to circumstances where the “event” involved extraneous circumstances, such as death or bankruptcy, and not merely the commercial transfer of a debt. The defendant claimed that if a purchaser of a loan wishes to assume the position of plaintiff, it must bring new proceedings.

Analysis

Costello J, delivering the Court of Appeal judgment, held that the defendant had provided no justification for interpreting the Rules so narrowly and that the transfer of a loan book was enough to qualify as an “event” for the purposes of the Rules (Order 17, Rule 4 of the Rules requires the occurrence of an “event” which gives rise to a “change or transmission of interest or liability”). If substitution was not permitted it would defeat the legislative intent of certain enactments and lead to injustice. Furthermore, Costello J noted that having to bring fresh proceedings would lead to many claims being potentially statute-barred, which would be unjust and undesirable. Finally, the Court of Appeal also noted that the Rules were intended to be facilitative and the defendant’s interpretation would lead to a waste of time, effort and expense.

This is an important judgment which confirms that purchasers and sellers of loans can exchange places in litigation which travels with a loan sale.

Footnotes

1. [2016] IECA 104

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