Cautionary Obligations Flashcards
What is a cautionary obligation?
“Cautionry is an accessory (parasitic - it’s existence depends on there being another debt) obligation (voluntarily undertaken either a contract or a promise) or engagement as surety for another, that the principal obligant shall pay the debt or perform the act for which he has engaged, otherwise the cautioner shall pay the debt or fulfil the obligation.” Gloag and Irvine.
Caution (noun); cautionry (noun); cautionary (adjective). A owes money to B, and C guarantees to B that debt will be paid. C is cautioner (guarantor). English term: “surety/ship.” A is principal obligant (debtor). B is the creditor.
NB most documents do not use the Scottish terminology. In English jargon it is called guarantee or surety. The person who gives the guarantee in Scotland (cautioner) in England is called the guarantor.
[[NB English terminology is often used in Scotland. In England a cautionary obligation is called a surety / guarantee. The person who grants the guarantee is called the guarantor in England.]]
Who is included in a cautionary obligation?
Cautionary obligations are a three party relationship
⁃ 1) Creditor
⁃ 2) Debtor (principal obligant[ The courts tend to use the term principal obligant rather than debtor because, from the purpose of the creditor, both the principal obligant and the cautioner are both debtors.] (PO))
⁃ 3) Cautioner
So we have
(1) the principal obligant (the original debtor)
(2) cautioner (person who gives the guarantee (they owe the second obligation to —)
(3) creditor (has two personal rights)
What are the key elements of a cautionary obligation?
The key elements:
⁃ Accessory obligation
⁃ Three party relationship (principal obligant[ Principal obligant shall pay the debt to the creditor.], cautioner[ If the principal obligation doesn’t pay the debt then the cautioner will pay the debt.], creditor[ The person owed the debt.])
What personal rights does the creditor have?
The creditor has two personal rights:
They hold a personal right against the PO and an accessory right against the cautioner.
⁃ In the event that the debtor defaults, then the creditor will have a second right against the cautioner. In certain circumstances the cautioner signs up to something which effectively means that they are equally liable with the principal obligant from the perspective of the creditor.
⁃ The cautioner will typically have granted a unilateral obligation saying that they will agree to make a payment to the creditor in the event of default by the PO.
⁃ If the cautionary obligation is constitute as a unilateral obligation then under the RWSA 1995 it will have to be in writing.
⁃ However if the cautioner is getting something for the grant of the obligation or they are granting it in the course of a business then it does not need to be in writing (again see RWSA).
What happens if the principle obligant doesn’t pay?
⁃ If the PO doesn’t pay and the cautioner does pay, the cautioner has a right of relief against the PO (a right to sue the PO for the sum that they’ve paid.
⁃ If there are two or more cautioners and one ends up paying the whole amount then the one who paid has a right of relief agains the other cautioners on the basis of joint and several liability.
What are some examples of cautionary obligations in practice?
⁃ 1. In some (small) limited liability companies the creditors will use cautionary obligations from directors of the company that if the company doesn’t pay the debts due, the directors will pay the debts due. The shareholders in these companies are usually the director. But as a bank lending to a small limited liability company you would look at their assets since a lot of business operate without actually owning assets, i.e. by leasing equipment. (If they hire it and go bust it means the bank can’t take their equipment). So this is a lack of available collateral to insure the business, they will ask for a guarantee over the directors assets e.g. private dwelling house, the bank thus goes behind the veil but trying to get directors and shareholders by requiring them to grant cautionary obligations.
⁃ 2. Family (e.g. where one person in a family is wanting to borrow money the creditor may want someone to grant a cautionary obligation from another member of the family.)
⁃ 3. Groups of companies (where companies create subsidiaries to ring fence liability. Creditors are aware of this and will often ask the parent company to grant a cautionary obligation to support loans taken by the subsidiaries.) The subsidiaries are often set up to make the most of limited liability by “ring fencing” the assets to ensure there is a limited pool available to the creditors. The bank might then request for a guarantee over the companies in the group (which may be worth more money)
⁃ 4. Insurance companies in relation to executries (if you don’t have a will and you want to appoint an executor-dative, they can only be appointed if they give caution to the court. This involves getting the insurance company to underwrite the risk that there is going to be somebody who comes along who is between entitled to be the executor and can administer the estate).
- Where it is an intestate succession, the court requires you to provide a bondifcation, an underwriting of the executry, this tends to get provided by insurance companies who assume the risk. It is structured as a cautionary obligation to underwrite the process.
What is a third party pledge?
⁃ This is a bit like a cautionary obligation but isn’t quite is where you have a “third party pledge”. This is where the creditor is granted a security over an asset belonging to a third party.
- This can occur where a husband and wife own a house in common. The husband owns a small business and borrows money for it. The bank ask for a security over his house. But since the house is owned by both the husband and wife, the bank require both the husband and wife to grant a standard security over their half share. The wife is effectively granting a real right over an asset which is owned by somebody else. The wife/cohabitant must sign up as well. The wife does not incur any personal liability. It is not a cautionary obligation in the strict sense as the bank has no personal right agains the wife, but her share in the house is potentially at risk. She has granted a security for a debt that is not hers, against a third party.
⁃ This is not a cautionary obligation in the strict sense because the wife is not personally liable in the event that the husband doesn’t pay - what the creditors can do is sell her share of the property. The court’s refer to this as a third party pledge. Although it isn’t a cautionary obligation, the courts have held that the general rules of cautionary obligations do apply[ However it hasn’t been that the totality of rules apply - merely the rules which apply where cautioners attempt to escape liability. (see point below)].
⁃ The general rules which apply are those which involve the cautioner attempting to escape liability.
The key cases are:
Hewitt v Williamson, and Smith v BoS 1997 (confirms that third party pledge is treated as a cautionary obligation in certain situations)
Hewitt v Williamson
??
Smith v BoS 1997
Mrs Smith granted a standard security over her 1/2 share of her house and so did Mr Smith. It was Mr Smith’s business that was liable. Wife induced to sign standard security securing Husband’s debt due to H’s misrepresentation. Security over co-owned property. W did not get independent advice. Bank unaware. W seeks reduction of security. [ Not lectured on here]
What is a quasi-caution?
- Every partner is liable for the firm (Partnership Act 1890)
- If you sign the bill, you become liable on it. So every endorser of the Bill of Exchange, by signing it, is guaranteeing payment. This is quasi-cautioner.
What is improper caution?
Improper caution occurs where by looking at the document you can’t tell if it is a cautionary obligation or not. It looks like a normal contract. The cautioner and principal obligant purport to bind themselves as joint borrowers.
What is proper caution?
Proper caution: where a caution is done “properly”, where true situation is stated in the document so that the cautioner is expressly stating that they are a cautioner and will pay in the event of default by the PO. It is framed as a security. “I am guaranteeing to pay X sum where A is unable to pay”.
Can the cautioner act gratuitously or onerously?
Either
What is the difference between proper/improper caution?
In proper caution you are entitled to discussion and division (protections)
What is division?
??
What is discussion?
⁃ Discussion was a form of protection that the cautioner got. It was a protection whereby the cautioner would only become obliged to make payment in the event that the creditor had taken all necessary steps in order to enforce the debt. (All necessary steps included going to court and doing diligence - only after diligence if the debt still wasn’t paid then the cautioner could be sued). This rule was abolished as a default rule in 1856 however it is open to the parties to contract into. [In practice, creditors do not want the cautioner to contract into it so it only happens very rarely.]
⁃ This means that in effect in both improper and proper caution where discussion has not been contract into joint and several liability operates (the creditor can thus choose who to sue.) The creditor should choose to sue the PO first but they don’t need to do anything beyond this; if the PO is insolvent then they can immediately raise an action against the cautioner. Although either the PO or cautioner can be sued the pro liability is that the PO is 100% liable and the cautioner 0% liable so the cautioner can sue the PO for the full payment (the right to relief which has been mentioned above).
How does joint and severally liability work?
In joint and several liability, each debtor can potentially be sued for the totality of the debt. Each debtor can be sued for the total. So from the perspective of a third party who wants to sue, they have lots of choice (e.g to choose the party with the most money).
- However it also has an internal aspect, which is that those parties have agreed between themselves that one person will be liable up to a certain percentage and someone else will not be liable to a lower extent.
- e.g. Mortgage 50%/50% liability where no express term to the contrary.
How does joint and several liability apply in cautionry obligations?
- In cautionary obligations, the joint and several liability of the principal 100%, the cautioners liability is 0%. So if the cautioner is sued, they are entitled to acquire all of the money sued from the principal obligant. From the perspective of the creditor, they do not care (can sue cautioner even where they are 0% liable). But in terms of joint and several liability they are equally liable to the extent.
- See MacNeil, para 8.14-8.23
- The cautioner has the “right of relief” — repayment of the sum that the cautioner has ultimately paid.
- If the principal obligant goes solvent however the cautioner may have a right of relief worth nothing.