Mortgage Issues
Land and Conveyancing Law Reform Act, 2009
PART 7
Co-Ownership
Unilateral severance of a joint tenancy.
30.— (1) From the commencement of this Part, any—
( a) conveyance, or contract for a conveyance, of land held in a joint tenancy, or
( b) acquisition of another interest in such land,
by a joint tenant without the consent referred to in subsection (2) is void both at law and in equity unless such consent is dispensed with under section 31(2)(e) .
(2) In subsection (1)“consent” means the prior consent in writing of the other joint tenant or, where there are more than one other, all the other joint tenants.
(3) From the commencement of this Part, registration of a judgment mortgage against the estate or interest in land of a joint tenant does not sever the joint tenancy and if the joint tenancy remains unsevered, the judgment mortgage is extinguished upon the death of the judgment debtor.
(4) Nothing in this section affects the jurisdiction of the court to find that all the joint tenants by mutual agreement or by their conduct have severed the joint tenancy in equity.
Court orders.
31.— (1) Any person having an estate or interest in land which is co-owned whether at law or in equity may apply to the court for an order under this section.
(2) An order under this section includes—
[PA 1868][PA 1876]
( a) an order for partition of the land amongst the co-owners,
( b) an order for the taking of an account of incumbrances affecting the land, if any, and the making of inquiries as to the respective priorities of any such incumbrances,
( c) an order for sale of the land and distribution of the proceeds of sale as the court directs,
[AJA 1707, s. 23]
( d) an order directing that accounting adjustments be made as between the co-owners,
( e) an order dispensing with consent to severance of a joint tenancy as required by section 30 where such consent is being unreasonably withheld,
( f) such other order relating to the land as appears to the court to be just and equitable in the circumstances of the case.
(3) In dealing with an application for an order under subsection (1) the court may—
( a) make an order with or without conditions or other requirements attached to it, or
( b) dismiss the application without making any order, or
( c) combine more than one order under this section.
(4) In this section—
( a) “person having an estate or interest in land” includes a mortgagee or other secured creditor, a judgment mortgagee or a trustee,
( b) “accounting adjustments” include—
(i) payment of an occupation rent by a co-owner who has enjoyed, or is continuing to enjoy, occupation of the land to the exclusion of any other co-owner,
(ii) compensation to be paid by a co-owner to any other co-owner who has incurred disproportionate expenditure in respect of the land (including its repair or improvement),
(iii) contributions by a co-owner to disproportionate payments made by any other co-owner in respect of the land (including payments in respect of charges, rates, rents, taxes and other outgoings payable in respect of it),
(iv) redistribution of rents and profits received by a co-owner disproportionate to his or her interest in the land,
(v) any other adjustment necessary to achieve fairness between the co-owners.
(5) Nothing in this section affects the jurisdiction of the court under the Act of 1976, the Act of 1995 and the Act of 1996.
(6) The equitable jurisdiction of the court to make an order for partition of land which is co-owned whether at law or in equity is abolished.
Annotations:
Modifications (not altering text):
C3
Application of section restricted (3.09.2021) by Affordable Housing Act 2021 (25/2021), s. 22(5), S.I. No. 450 of 2021.
Relationship with other enactments
22.— …
(5) Section 31 of the Conveyancing Act shall not apply in respect of the affordable dwelling equity.
…
Bodies corporate.
32.— (1) A body corporate may acquire and hold any property in a joint tenancy in the same manner as if it were an individual.
[BC(JT) A 1899]
(2) Where a body corporate and an individual or two or more bodies corporate become entitled to any property in circumstances or by virtue of any instrument which would, if the body or bodies corporate had been an individual or individuals, have created a joint tenancy, they are entitled to the property as joint tenants.
(3) On the dissolution of a body corporate which is a joint tenant of any property, the property devolves on the other surviving joint tenant or joint tenants.
Cases
A. D. M. Mersey Plc v Bergin
[2020] IEHC 3
Jurisdiction: Ireland
Court: High Court (Ireland)
Judge: Mr. Justice AllenThe arguments
14
Intriguingly, Mr. Buttanshaw, having so framed the issue, submits that it makes no difference whether they can or cannot sever their joint tenancy. If the severance of a joint tenancy after registration of a judgment mortgage against the interest of one of the joint tenants is not wholly ineffective against the judgment mortgagee, he argues, it is effective to confer on the judgment mortgagee security over the interest of each of the tenants in common after severance.
15
The argument is based on three propositions. The first is that as joint tenants James Bergin and his father each owned the entire of the lands rather than either a defined or identifiable portion, or a defined fraction. Reference is made to the definition of a joint tenancy in Megarry & Wade The Law of Real Property (9th Edition) at para. 12-002 and 12-003: –
“A gift of lands to two or more persons in joint tenancy is such a gift as imparts to them, with respect to all other persons than themselves, the properties of one single owner. Although as between themselves joint tenants have separate rights as against everyone else they are in the position of a single owner. The intimate nature of joint tenancy is shown by its two principal features, the right of survivorship and the ‘four unities’… .
It is often said therefore that each joint tenant holds nothing and yet holds the whole together with the other.”
16
I accept the short passage relied on as a correct statement of the law. As to the submission on behalf of the plaintiff, I think that it is more correct to say that, as against the world, the two joint tenants both, rather than each, own the entire of the lands.
17
The second proposition is that after an effective severance of a joint tenancy, as between the two joint tenants, each co-owner owns an equal undivided moiety of the property. That is correct. “In other words”, it is said, “following severance each joint tenant no longer owns the whole of the common property but only a defined fraction thereof”. With respect, I do not believe that the suggested alternative formulation is truly an alternative formulation, or that it is correct. It is certainly correct to say that each of the two tenants in common, are as between themselves, entitled to an undivided moiety but together they both own the whole.
18
As Prof. Wylie explains in the 5th edition of his work on Irish Land Law at para. 8.03: –
“In the case of both a joint tenancy and a tenancy in common, the land held by the persons concerned is held by them concurrently, so that as far as third parties are concerned the co-owners of the land must be treated a single unit for the purpose of certain transactions in respect of the land.”
19
Mr. Buttanshaw’s third proposition is that since it is the case that a co-owner owns the whole of the property before severance and only half after, it necessarily follows that the act of severance is an alienation by each to the other of an equal undivided moiety. It is here, in my view, that the argument breaks down: or, perhaps, fails to come together. The first proposition looks at a co-ownership from the point of view of everyone else, but the second from the point of view of the co-owners. As is clear from the short passage cited from Megarry & Wade, joint tenants, between themselves have separate rights so that the effect of severance is to convert the joint tenancy into a tenancy in common, specifically by destroying the right of survivorship.
20
It seems to me that the third proposition on which the plaintiff’s argument is based fails to recognise the difference between those two points of view. Moreover, the proposition that severance involves alienation to the other joint tenant fails to take account of the fact that until 2009 a joint tenancy could be severed unilaterally by the acquisition by one of the joint tenants of a further interest in the property or by the alienation by the joint tenant of his interest to a third party, or of the fact that a joint tenancy is severed by the simultaneous death of the joint tenants, or by the bankruptcy of one of the joint tenants. While the effect of severance is that each of the co-owners will have a different interest in the land (as against the world as well as inter se), it does not follow that each or either has obtained anything at all, still less his entire interest in the land, from the other. After as well as before the severance, the co-owners will hold their interest from the original grant.
21
It is submitted on behalf of the plaintiff that the registration of a judgment mortgage “captures the whole of the property which is held on a joint tenancy”. I cannot agree. All that it can capture is the judgment debtor’s interest in the property. It is well and long settled that a judgment mortgage is a process of execution. See for example Re Strong [1940] IR 382.
22
Prior to the operative date of the Land and Conveyancing Law Reform Act, 2009, a judgment mortgage against unregistered land, because it took effect as a mortgage, severed a joint tenancy but a judgment mortgage against registered land, because it operated as a charge, did not. This had the effect that a judgment mortgage registered against the interest of a joint tenant in registered land was extinguished on the death of the judgment debtor: Mahon v. Lawlor [2011] 1 I.R. 311. And that a judgment mortgagee of registered land did not have a sufficient interest in the land to give him locus standi to maintain an action for partition: Irwin v. Deasy [2011] 2 I.R. 752.
23
It made no sense that the rights of judgment mortgagees and joint tenants, or surviving joint tenants, should depend upon the accident as to whether the title to the property was registered or unregistered, and the two were brought into alignment by the Act of 2009, since when a judgment mortgage will operate as a charge against both unregistered and registered land, and a judgment mortgagee (although he is not) is treated as a “person having an estate or interest in land” so as to be amongst those who may apply for an order under section 31.
24
Section 30 of the Act of 2009 substantially restricts the circumstances in which a joint tenancy can be severed. Section 30 provides: –
“30 – (1) From the commencement of this Part, any –
(a) conveyance, or contract for a conveyance, of land held in a joint tenancy, or
(b) acquisition of another interest in such land,
by a joint tenant without the consent referred to in subsection (2) is void both at law and in equity unless such consent is dispensed with under section 31(2)(e).
(2) In subsection (1) ‘consent’ means the prior consent in writing of the other joint tenant or, where there are more than one other, all the other joint tenants.
(3) From the commencement of this Part, registration of a judgment mortgage against the estate or interest in land of a joint tenant does not sever the joint tenancy and if the joint tenancy remains unsevered, the judgment mortgage is extinguished upon the death of the judgment debtor.
(4) Nothing in this section affects the jurisdiction of the court to find that all the joint tenants by mutual agreement or by their conduct have severed the joint tenancy in equity.”
25
Prof. Wylie at paras 8.29 and 8.30 traces the legislative history of s. 30 of the Act of 2009 which explains the uneasy concept of unilateral severance by one joint tenant with the prior written consent of all the other joint tenants, save where the joint tenant wishing to sever has applied for and obtained an order dispensing with the consent that has been unreasonably withheld. Significantly, for present purposes, the scheme of the legislation appears to me to be to limit the exercise of what theretofore had been a right, rather than to abrogate the right altogether. The unilateral severance does not strictly speaking require the co-operation of the other joint tenants but merely their consent. The other joint tenants must nowadays agree to it, but the severance is still effected by the act of the one.
26
I pause here to deal with one element of the argument made by Mr. Kennedy on behalf of the estate of Mr. Kieran Bergin, which is that the Oireachtas could not have intended that if the non-debtor dies before the debtor, that the debtor will become entitled to the whole of the property by survivorship and that consequently the judgment mortgage will attach to the whole of the property and not just his undivided share. It is submitted that if the legislation envisaged a creditor receiving what is said to be a a windfall of this nature, it would have expressly provided for this. The immediate policy behind s. 30(3) may very well have been to align the position of a surviving non-debtor joint tenant of unregistered land with that of a surviving non-debtor joint tenant of registered land but it seems to me that that alignment necessarily aligned the position of surviving debtor joint tenants. On the death of the non-debtor joint tenant the debtor takes the entire interest in the land by survivorship, and the judgment mortgage is not extinguished. Logically, the judgment mortgage remains in force against the enlarged interest of the judgment mortgagee. In consequence, as Mr. Buttanshaw submits, if nothing is done after a judgment mortgage has been registered against the interest of one of the joint tenants, the judgment mortgagee may come to have security over the entire of the lands, or no security at all, depending on which of the joint tenants dies first. It was against that eventuality that the plaintiff might come to have security against the whole of the lands that Mr. Kieran Bergin sought to make provision by the deed he executed on 8th May, 2013.
27
Section 30, sub-s. 3, expressly contemplates that a joint tenancy may be severed after the registration of a joint mortgage and before the death of judgment debtor. Clearly this could be the effect of an order under s. 31 or s. 117, including an order under s. 31(2)(e) dispensing with the consent of one or more joint tenants, where such consent has been unreasonably withheld: but the issue raised in this case is whether the joint tenancy may be severed by what has been referred to in argument as the “innocent” joint tenant but what the old cases call the “companion” joint tenant, with the consent of the judgment debtor.
28
It is acknowledged on behalf of the plaintiff that during the life of the judgment debtor the companion joint tenant as well as the judgment mortgagee may apply to court for an order under section 31. Unless and until such an order is sought and obtained, it is submitted, all are to be taken as rolling the survivorship dice.
29
In this case, the game might have commenced on 16th July, 2010 when the plaintiff recovered an enforceable judgment and its right of action accrued. The potential players were the judgment debtor, who could not win; an octogenarian retired farmer and shopkeeper of limited resources whose son was in serious financial difficulties; and a public limited company which had twelve years to cast the dice which might roll for many years before finally coming to rest. Mr. Kieran Bergin did not want to play. Neither did the plaintiff, for it applied to the court on 15th July, 2015 for an order for sale of the lands. If Mr. Bergin, whose interest in the land was potentially at stake, had been named as a defendant and had been before the court on 20th June, 2016 when the well charging order was made, the plaintiff’s claim for an order for sale and division of the proceeds could have been dealt with.
30
In principle, the registration of the judgment mortgage was a process of execution against the interest of Mr. James Bergin in the lands and did not affect the interest of Mr. Kieran Bergin. The effect of s. 30(3) was that Mr. Kieran Bergin’s share was on the hazard unless and until the joint tenancy was severed, but if the plaintiff is correct, the only means by which it could have been severed was a court order for the sale of the lands and division of the proceeds.
31
It seems to me that s. 30(4) clearly contemplates severance otherwise than by an order for sale: specifically by the unilateral act of one of the joint tenants, subject to the prior consent in writing of the other or others, unless dispensed with by court order. Moreover, s. 30(4) is specifically directed to cases in which a judgment mortgage has been registered against the interest of one of the joint tenants, but not the others. The only consent requires is that of the other co-owners, and not the judgment mortgagee. In my opinion, the proposition that the only means by which Mr. Kieran Bergin could have avoided the risk that Mr. James Bergin would become entitled to his share was to obtain an order for sale and division is inconsistent with the express power in s. 31(1)(e) to make an order dispensing with consent to severance without making an order for sale. It does not make sense to me to contemplate that the availability to an innocent or companion joint tenant of the option to sever would depend upon the unreasonable withholding of consent by the judgment mortgagor.
32
In support of his third proposition, Mr. Buttanshaw relies on Lord Abergavenny’s case (1604) Pasch. 5 Jacobi, which was referred to by Finnegan J. in his judgment in Mahon v. Lawlor [2011] 1 I.R. 311. That was a case in which one of two joint tenants, against whom judgment had been obtained, released to her companion before execution. On the later death of the debtor, the survivor was found not to take discharged of execution because she had taken by the release and not by survivorship, which had been taken away by the release.
33
It is submitted that the effect of the decision in Lord Abergavenny’s case is that a judgment debtor joint tenant cannot by his own act put the interest he or she held in the land beyond the reach of the judgment creditor. I agree. I do not, however, accept that the effect of the deed of 8th May, 2013 was a release by Mr. Jim Bergin of an equal undivided moiety of the interest which he held. Nor do I accept that the object or effect of that deed was to put the interest which Mr. Jim Bergin had in the lands beyond the reach of his creditors. Rather the common intention of the owners was to put the interest of Mr. Kieran Bergin beyond the reach of the plaintiff. I can see nothing whatsoever wrong with that.
34
The deed of 8th May, 2013 was in form a transfer from Kieran Bergin and James Bergin, as joint tenants, to themselves as tenants in common but the declared purpose of the instrument was to effect a severance of their joint tenancy and the instrument has been referred to in the defendants’ written submissions and in argument as a deed of severance. The substance of the transaction was not that either divested himself of anything, or transferred anything to the other, but that the joint tenancy was converted to a tenancy in common. Before and after the transaction, the interest of Mr. James Bergin was subject to the judgment mortgage in favour of the plaintiff, but the interest of Mr. Kieran Bergin was not. Nothing passed from Mr. James Bergin to Mr. Kieran Bergin to which the judgment mortgage might have been attached.
35
The submissions on behalf of the defendants are more straightforward and focus on the effect of the deed of 8th May, 2013 in equity.
36
As a matter if law, it is said, a judgment mortgage is a process of execution. Reference is made to Containercare v. Wycherley [1982] I.R. 143 and Goodbody Pensioneer Trustees v. Hevac [2019] IEHC 114. That is well established.
37
The judgment mortgage attaches to the interest of the judgment debtor at the time of registration. It does not attach to future or contingent interests. Reference is made to Re: Rae’s Estate (1877) L.R. Ir. 174, Tempany v. Hynes [1976] I.R. 101, and Goodbody Pensioneer Trustees v. Hevac [2019] IEHC 114. I accept the submission as a correct statement of law, but I disagree with the premise of the submission which is that the right or prospect of survivorship of a joint tenant is a future or contingent interest in land. Rather, as I understand the law, the possibility of survivorship is an incident of the joint tenancy.
38
Mr. Dermot Cahill, for Mr. James Bergin, and Mr. Kennedy. for the interests of Mr. Kieran Bergin, submit that it is clearly established that joint tenants may agree to hold as tenants in common and that effect will be given to such a contract. So it is.
39
Section 30(4) of the Act of 2009 expressly preserves the long established jurisdiction of the court to find that all the joint tenants by mutual agreement or by their conduct have severed the joint tenancy in equity.
40
Wylie at para 8.42 notes that:-
“… Apart from [severance by a contract to alienate] there is no reason why the joint tenants should not enter into a contract that thenceforward they should hold as tenants in common, and equity will give effect to such a contract. Indeed, the joint tenants may not even formalise their agreement to that extent. There is ample authority in Ireland to the effect that equity will infer such an agreement from the joint tenants’ conduct, eg, where they seem to have treated their interests in the property as severed over a substantial period of time. This equitable jurisdiction to find that a severance based on mutual agreement or conduct of all the joint tenants was expressly saved by s. 30(4) of the Land and Conveyancing Law Reform Act, 2009.” [The emphasis is that of Prof. Wylie]
41
Mr. Cahill, leaving nothing to chance, went back to the authorities relied on by Wylie, in particular Williams v. Hensman (1861) 1 J & H 546, 70 E.R. 862, in which Page-Wood V-C is reported as saying:-
“A joint tenancy may be severed in three ways: in the first place, an act of any one of the persons interested operating upon his share may create a severance as to that share. The right of each joint-tenant is a right of survivorship only in the event of no severance having taken place of the share which is claimed under the jus accrescendi. Each one is at liberty to dispose of his own interest in such manner as to sever it from the joint fund – losing, of course, at the same time, his own right of survivorship. Secondly, a joint-tenancy may be severed by mutual agreement. And, in the third place, there may be a severance by any course of dealing sufficient to intimate that the interests of all were mutually treated as constituting a tenancy in common.”
42
In this case, it is said, Mr. Kieran Bergin and Mr. James Bergin agreed to hold as tenants in common and executed a deed accordingly. So they did. That being so, it seems to me that any issue as to the effect of the deed in law evaporates and the issue becomes whether there was any impediment to Mr. James Bergin consenting to the severance in equity.
43
It is accepted by Mr. Buttanshaw that the effect of the registration of the judgment mortgage was to charge the interest of Mr. James Bergin, only, in the land. The interest of Mr. Kieran Bergin in the lands was unaffected, as were his rights attached to that interest: one of which was the right, circumscribed as it was, to unilaterally sever the joint tenancy, another of which was to apply to the court for an order under s. 31, and yet another of which was to agree a severance. If Mr. Kieran Bergin, at the age he was, wanted to sever the joint tenancy with a view to his interest in the lands passing to his grandchildren rather than his son’s creditors, that, it seems to me, was perfectly reasonable. If Mr. James Bergin has withheld his consent, his father might have applied to court for an order dispensing with that consent and I cannot think of any reason why such an order, if required, would not have been made. If the judgment mortgagee of Mr. James Bergin’s interest would have been entitled to be heard on any such application (and I do not say that it would) I cannot think that the plaintiff would have been heard to say that it wanted to lock down Mr. Kieran Bergin’s interest in an unwilling game of survivorship roulette. The difficulty in this case, however, would have been that Mr. Kieran Bergin could not have invoked his right to apply for an order dispensing with consent because it was forthcoming. If Mr. Kieran Bergin had applied to court for an order for the sale of the lands and division of the proceeds, that would have matched precisely what the plaintiff wanted.
44
In my view, there was no impediment in law or in equity to the Messrs. Bergin agreeing that thenceforth they would own the lands as tenants in common rather than as joint tenants. This, as a matter of law, changed the nature of Mr. James Bergin’s interest in the lands, but he did not divest himself of anything or pass anything to Mr. Kieran Bergin.
45
I find that Mr. Kieran Bergin and Mr. James Bergin by the deed they executed on 8th May, 2013 severed their joint tenancy by mutual agreement.
46
It will have been noted that there was a long delay in registering the transfer. Mr. David Doyle, solicitor, who acted for Mr. Kieran Bergin at the time of execution of the deed has confirmed that it was executed on the date for which it is dated and that the reason for the delay in registration was that he was not in funds for the necessary outlays. Whatever the actuarial prospects of survivorship may have been, the effect of the deed was to crystallise the rights of the plaintiff as well as Mr. Kieran Bergin. Counsel are agreed that the fact that the deed was executed before, but registered after, the well charging order was made makes no difference. The issue is whether there was any impediment to the severing of the joint tenancy by agreement at any time between the registration of the judgment mortgage and the death of whichever of the co-owners who might first die or the making of an order for sale under section 31. In my view there was not.
Conclusions
47
There will be an order pursuant to O. 15, r. 13 of the Rules of the Superior Courts joining Eimear Bergin and Ciaran Bergin, as legal personal representatives of Kieran Bergin, as defendants.
48
The judgment mortgage registered by the plaintiff on 9th September, 2010 against the interest of the first defendant in the lands in Folio 7642, County Kilkenny, did not affect the interest of Mr. Kieran Bergin, who was at that time a joint tenant.
49
The judgment mortgage did not attach to the lands, but only to the judgment mortgagor’s interest in the lands: which was an undivided share as joint tenant with his father.
50
The judgment mortgage did not sever the joint tenancy but neither did it affect the right of Mr. Kieran Bergin to sever the joint tenancy, or the right of Mr. James Bergin to consent to such severance or to agree to severance. Nor, since it took effect as a charge, did the judgment mortgage affect Mr. James Bergin’s ability to deal with his interest.
51
The deed of 8th May, 2013 was effective to sever the joint tenancy.
52
The effect of severing a joint tenancy, in law and in equity, is not to convey or transfer the interest, or any part of the interest, of either co-owner to the other but to convert the undivided share of each joint tenant into an undivided moiety in the lands.
53
The right, or prospect, or possibility, of survivorship is not a future or contingent interest in land but an incident of joint tenancy.
54
Before severance, the plaintiff’s judgment mortgage was attached to the undivided share of Mr. James Bergin. After severance, it was attached to his undivided moiety and it is to be satisfied out of that interest.
55
Folio 7642, County Kilkenny, correctly shows each of Mr. Kieran Bergin and Mr. James Bergin as the owners as tenants in common of one undivided half share, and that the interest of James Bergin is subject to a judgment mortgage in favour of the plaintiff.
Whyte v Cosgrave
[2016] IEHC 190
Mr. Justice O’ConnorEX TEMPORE JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice O’Connor delivered on the 11th day of April, 2016.
1
After the exchange with the Court last Wednesday the 6th of April, 2016, senior counsel for the plaintiff in his reply to submissions of Mr. Power, counsel for the first named defendant, and Mr. Duggan for the second named defendant confined the application in these proceedings (commenced by special summons issued on the 1st of October, 2013 as verified by the plaintiff in his affidavit sworn on the 22nd of August, 2013) to seeking:-
(3) An order for partition of the lands and house comprised in Folio 68629L Co. Dublin pursuant to s.31(2)(a) of the Land and Conveyancing Law Reform Act, 2009 (‘the 2009 Act’) and
(7) An order directing all necessary consequent accounts and enquiries.
2
The Court gave liberty to counsel for the defendants to file written submissions and to senior counsel for the plaintiff to complete his reply today, Monday the 11th of April. Counsel for the plaintiff explained that all matters had been addressed already which had been covered in the written submissions.
3
Firstly the Court expresses its appreciation of the research and written submissions completed in such a short time frame by counsel for the defendants.
Facts
4
The relevant facts might be summarised as follows:-
1) The defendants were registered as joint owners of 66 Plunkett Avenue, Finglas on the 5th of February, 1987, the defendants having paid IR£16,500 for the house.
2) The second named defendant (‘Mrs. Cosgrave’) contributed significantly to the repayment of the loan used to redeem the mortgage. She has lived there since 1987. It is a family home which is visited and used by her children, grandchildren and great grandchildren including a special grandson with needs for respite.
3) On the 9th of April, 2008 the late Feeney J. awarded, in uncontested proceedings a sum of €450,000 to the plaintiff against the first named defendant (‘Mr. Cosgrave’). Some relatively small credit for that judgment was due to Mr. Cosgrave arising from the terms of his sentence following his conviction in criminal proceedings for the same events leading to the prosecution and the judgment of Feeney J.
4) On the 15th of February, 2010 a judgment mortgage was registered against Mr. Cosgrave on Folio 68629L which contained the said family home.
5) Without seeking to engage either of the defendants in the process of realising that judgment mortgage, the plaintiff swore a short verifying affidavit for the special summons on the 22nd of August, 2013. The only fact which was incorrect in that affidavit was the reference to the actual affidavit relied upon for registering the judgment mortgage; nothing really turns on that point. The plaintiff’s solicitor corrected the error in a supplemental affidavit and explained how another affidavit was filed as a result of the commencement of the 2009 Act with effect from the 1st of December, 2009.
6) Mr. Cosgrave served a notice to cross examine the plaintiff on his affidavit and the Court has already ruled that cross examination of the plaintiff on that affidavit will not advance matters and will probably not assist the defendants.
7) Only after the defendant had served the replying affidavit to the plaintiff’s affidavit and the first affidavit of the plaintiff’s solicitor, did Mrs. Cosgrave receive a letter dated the 10th of July, 2014 seeking the consent of Mrs. Cosgrave to the partition of the family home pursuant to s.31(2)(a) of the 2009 Act. This was on the eve of a hearing in these proceedings on the 10th of July, 2014.
8) The plaintiff for reasons which have not been clarified on affidavit has not advanced any material fact for consideration by this Court in relation to the exercise of the Court’s jurisdiction and discretion to make the orders now sought.
9) On the other hand Mrs. Cosgrave makes the following points that are not contradicted:-
(i) She did not know of the claim in these proceedings until they were served and explained to her;
(ii) She has maintained the house and has paid significantly to the repayments and upkeep of same;
(iii) Her only income is now a pension and she would not be able to purchase another family home if forced to do so by an order of this Court during her lifetime.
10) Mr. Cosgrave while not denying his liability to the plaintiff stresses:-
(a) The fact that the property has been his wife’s family home for the last 28 years or more now;
(b) the fact that the plaintiff has refused or omitted to explain how it would not be grossly unfair to Mrs. Cosgrave to partition the house.
Formed Decision
5
The 2009 Act modernised the law in relation to this area and it is fair to say that in future there should be a process of engagement between a judgment mortgage creditor and innocent third parties who are joint owners of a property with the judgment mortgage debtor prior to the issue of proceedings. Simply to seek one or more of the orders envisaged in s.31 (2) of the 2009 Act without some prior consultation with each of the relevant parties is counter productive. The onus rests on a judgment mortgage creditor to establish the reasons for severing effectively a joint tenancy when seeking partition, sale or whatever.
6
Section 30(3) of the 2009 Act clarifies for all cases now that registration of a judgment mortgage does not sever the joint tenancy.
7
The partition order now sought by the plaintiff will probably be ‘futile’ which was the word used by Denham J. in First National Building Society v. Ring [1992] 1 IR 375.
8
Further such an order will lead to unnecessary costs and stress to Mrs. Cosgrave. The plaintiff has not advanced any reason why partition should be directed other than for his desire for some part payment of the debt owed by Mr. Cosgrave which has nothing to do with Mrs. Cosgrave.
9
It is not the case that the property could be physically divided and one part of the family home sold. Mrs. Cosgrave’s assertion about her inability to get alternative accommodation is unchallenged.
10
The Court for the reasons outlined and in exercising its discretion refuses to make the orders sought.
11
Finally by way of obiter the Court notes that following a period of engagement prior to the issue of this type of proceedings in the future, it may be open to a judgment creditor to apply merely for an order severing the joint tenancy and declaring the tenancy to be a tenancy in common with or without conditions, provided the judgment creditor satisfies the Court that the innocent joint tenant has unreasonably withheld consent.
12
Hopefully wisdom will be accumulated in the next few years ‘to obviate another judgment creditor being impaled on the chevaux de frise for the regulation of judgment mortgages’ as Laffoy J. said when adopting the wording of the Royal Commission some 130 years ago in Irwin v Deasy [2006] 2 ILRM 226; [2011] 2 IR 752, 768 at para. 29. The Court renews this statement and more particularly for applications that will be made under the 2009 Act.