4. Payment Obligations and Commercial Paper: Payment of Debts Flashcards
How may debts be extinguished?
Debts may be extinguished by:
1) Performance
2) Novation
3) Delegation
4) Negative Prescription
5) Compensatio — known as settle.
What is novation?
Novation is where the debtor and the creditor agree that an old debt should be extinguished and replaced with a new debt. It is an express discharge that the old contract has come to an end and an express agreement that a new contract has been established.
What does novation require?
Novation requires the active participation of the debtor and the creditor.
When does novation arise in practice?
An example concerns the channel tunnel.
The tunnel was operated by a company which for many years was in financial troubles - it was very indebted. The company operating the tunnel were unable to pay the banks on a regular basis the amounts due. Accordingly every now and then they would propose to the bank, why don’t you agree to extinguish some of the debts that have been entered into previously and replace them with new debts. Why would the bank agree?
The reason the bank would agree is that the bank knew that the only asset that the company had was a tunnel so that if the company went bust the only asset they could sell would be a tunnel which would not raise enough to pay all the debts. So the banks think acknowledge that it may be advantageous to extinguish the old debts and replace them with lesser debts so that they at least receive some return.
So in this example what happened was a ‘debt to equity conversion’ whereby the loans were reduced in exchange for the bank getting some shares in the company so that when the company started to make money the banks would share in the profits so they would get some return - this would be better than getting nothing at all/ very little in terms of liquidation. The way in which this debt was structured was in terms of novation.]
- Debt Restructuring
- So when you agree that certain liabilities of the debtor should be extinguished.
Why is novation often not attractive in practice?
Both parties do not always benefit. This is only worth doing if there is something in it for the debtor and the creditor (or it is unlikely they’ll agree to it). Otherwise, why would they give up a right to payment which they have against the debtor.
Special type of novation: delegation
One special type of notation is where it isn’t the original parties that enter the agreement but a new party comes in and the agreement is taken with them - the creditor agrees to the extinction of the old debt and a new debtor is created - this special type of novation is called delegation.
- New debtor substituted
What does delegation of a debt depend on?
Like novation generally, delegation is dependent on the agreement of the parties - the decision cannot be made unilaterally. A new debt is created and a different debtor takes over the debt.
When does delegation arise in practice?
Delegation typically arises in practice where there are groups of companies (e.g. parents and subsidiaries) which may want to shift debt from one company to another as part of company restructuring. In this case the creditor usually will be happy to allow the new debt to be taken over by another member of the group as long as the other member of the group has assets etc.
What is negative prescription?
Negative prescription is the process whereby debts are extinguished by passage of time.
The rules in relation to negative prescription are found in ss 6, 7, 9 and 10, and schs 1 and 2 of the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973.*** [must know].
What are the types of negative prescription?
There are two types of negative prescription
⁃ Short negative prescription (5 years)
⁃ Long negative prescription (20 years)
How do you determine if a debt is covered by sort or long negative prescription?
Obligations which arise under a contract or delict tend to be subject to short negative prescription and obligations which relate to land tend to be long negative prescription. It is a case of being familiar with the provisions above**.
To determine whether a debt is covered by short negative prescription one must look at Schedule 1.
⁃ Look up when schedule 2 is relevant?
What is Compensatio?
(compensation or set-off)
This is where payments which are due are balanced against each other. e.g. A owes B £5000 and B owes A £4000, overall A owes B £1000.
⁃ The reason for this doctrine is so that only one court process would be necessary to sort all the debts between two parties.
- They are balanced together so we can adjust it so that only one of them owed money to the other.
- This idea of set-off is what underpins compensatio.
The Compensation Act 1952
What are the four requirements for compensation to apply?
4 requirements for compensation to apply (or set off is not allowed):
1) Concursus crediti et debiti
It must be the same creditor and debtor in the same capacity as creditor and debtor.
⁃ A owes B money. B in his capacity as a trustee owes A money as a beneficiary under the trust. In this situation these two debts could not be set-off. For concursus crediti et debiti to apply the creditor and debtor have to be both creditor and debtor in the respective obligations in the same capacity on both sides of the transaction (so it is the same patrimony that is affected).
2) The obligations are of the same kind
If A owes B £10k and B is under an obligation to transfer to A 100 widgets, these obligations cannot be set-off against each other.
i.e. Not to buy oats. They are usually about two liquid sums of payment.
3) The debts must be certain and liquid
This means that if there is a breach of contract where there is an outstanding damages claim and quantification of the damages hasn’t taken place, this debt is not sufficiently certain to allow it to be compensated.
This typically only arises from a contractual obligation where you have fixed sums which are due. The debts have to be due now.
4) The matter is raised before decree
After decree has been given it is too late to have compensatio. So it can be raised as a defence to an action (that the sum should be reduced because an amount could be compensated) but once the decree is given you have missed your chance to raise it.
By balancing the debts it can serve to extinguish them.
Can parties specify how they want payment to be made? What happens if the contract is silent?
Where a contract has been entered into, the creditor can specify how they want payment to be made (so the parties can agree that payment is to be made in a particular way.)
If the contract is silent e.g. the creditor has not specified what they require for payment then the only thing that the debtor can require the creditor to take is legal tender. They creditor cannot refuse this.
What is legal tender in the Scottish context?
Only coins (however not all coins are legal tender for all debts) under the Coinage Act.
⁃ 1p and 2p coins are legal tender for debts up to 20p
⁃ 5p and 10p coins are legal tender for debts up to £5
⁃ 20p and 50p coins are legal tender for debts up to £10 [£1 or £2
⁃ £1 and £2 and any higher denomination coins are legal tender for everything else.
[So bus driver is legally entitled to refuse coins up to 20p etc.]
Physical money in the legal sense is Legal tender