INDEFINITE LIABILITY
OF GUARANTORS FOR
DEMAND GUARANTEES IN MALAYSIA
(By: A.P. Puthan A/L Perumal ) puthan23@gmail.com
(Advocate & Solicitor of
the High Court of Malaya)
INTRODUCTION
Under section 79 of the Contracts Act
1950, the person who gives a guarantee is called a surety. The term surety and
the term guarantor, as it is plainly and normally used,
essentially carry the same meaning in Malaysia . In Malaysia, the
principle of co-extensive liability of a surety with that of the principal debtor is embodied
in Section 81 of the Contracts Act 1950.
The principle essentially recognizes the position that the liability of a
surety is dependent on the existence of the liability on the part of the
principal debtor as a pre-requisite. If there is none, for whatever reason,
then the surety is released from his obligations as a guarantor. Again, not to
be confused.
On the face of it, this principle of co-extensiveness seem to
be applicable in cases involving guarantees apart from demand guarantees.
Demand guarantees, however, have been treated in a different manner so as not to attract the operation of the
co-extensive principle as enshrined in Section 81 of the Contracts Act 1950.
The position in Malaysia is that the cause of action, against a person who
stood as a surety in a demand guarantee situation, only accrues when a demand
for repayment is made to the surety. What this implies is that a creditor can
take all the time in the world to make a demand thus making the liability of
the surety indefinite as he or she will never be sure when he or she will be
called to make repayment, and the existence or rather the non-existence of the
principal debtor’s liability plays no part whatsoever. The danger with this
concept of indefinite liability is that it seems to convert the nature of
a guarantee, albeit a demand guarantee,
into one of an indemnity, thus depriving the surety of the defence of
limitation.
The main focus of this article is to
examine the application of the principle of co-extensive liability in other
jurisdictions, particularly the jurisdictions of India, Canada and Australia, in comparison
with the position in Malaysia, as well as the recognition of this principle in
the United Kingdom.
It is the author’s view that the Limitation Act 1953 should be
amended, in all fairness, to state that in cases involving recovery of monies
from a guarantor in a demand guarantee situation, the cause of action against
that guarantor shall only accrue when a demand is made to the guarantor for a debt
which is legally due and recoverable from the principal borrower in the first
place. If a demand is made to the guarantor when there is no debt legally due
and recoverable from the principal debtor, then that should be the end of that
matter and that demand cannot be valid to be enforced further.
It is hoped that the position in
Malaysia as regard “indefinite liability’ would in time be cleared up by our
apex court, or the legislature, so as not to leave guarantors in Malaysia hanging in mid-air
without any certainty as to their
liability.
HYPOTHETICAL BACKROUND
Bank X makes advances by way of an overdraft facility to Borrower
Y sometime in 01.07.1993 in the sum of RM100,00.00. A contract of guarantee
dated 01.07.1993 was signed by the Surety Z undertaking to pay on demand by the Bank X from the date
of Borrower Y’s default.
The only activity or transaction in
the account was the drawdown which took place
on 01.07.1993 and thereafter the account becomes dormant.
Bank X fails take any action to recover against Borrower Y and so on 01.07.1999, whatever debt by Borrower Y
to Bank X becomes time-barred pursuant to Section 6 (1) of the Malaysian Limitation
Act 1953.
It is settled law that a bank cannot
recover a dormant overdraft after the period of limitation from the last
advance had expired.
*Malaysian Federal Court case of Sim
Siok Eng v Kong Ming Bank Berhad (1980) 2 MLJ 21.
Bank X makes a demand on Surety Z for
the first time on 01.12.2001, some 2 years and 5 months after the principal debt was time-barred vis-a- vis Borrower Y.
Bank X subsequently commences a civil
action on 01.02.2002 to recover the sum of RM100,000.00 advanced back in
01.07.1993.
THE ISSUE:
Whether, under a guarantee which requires a demand as a condition precedent
for the liability of a surety, such a demand could be made for the first time when the debt had
become time-barred against the principle debtor/borrower?
THE LAW
1.
Section 81 of the Malaysian Contracts Act 1950 states that
the liability of a surety is co-extensive with that of the principle debtor,
unless it is otherwise provided by the contract.
2.
What
this means is that the liability of a surety is no less or no more than that of
the principal debtor. When Bank X seeks to enforce the debt against Surety Y ,
the surety is entitled to ask: Is
Borrower X liable in the first place?
If not, Surety Y has committed no default and
Bank X cannot compel Surety Y to discharge an obligation which has no
existence.
-Malaysian High Court
case of Government
of Malaysia v Gurcharan Singh & Ors (1971) 1 MLJ
3.
When
a demand is made by the Bank X on Surety Y as guarantor, under a guarantee
which requires a demand, as a condition precedent for the liability of Surety Y, such demand should be for payment
of a sum which is legally due and recoverable from the Borrower X. If the
debt had already become time-barred against Borrower X, the question of the Bank
X demanding payment thereafter, for the first time, against Surety Y, as
guarantor would not arise as the claim
is not a ‘live’ claim.
-Indian Supreme Court
case of Syndicate Bank v Channaveerappa
Beleri & Ors (2006) 11 SCC
4.
A guarantee is generally a contract between a guarantor and a lender. The
subject of the guarantee is a debt owed to the lender. In the contract of
guarantee, the guarantor agrees to repay the lender if the debtor defaults. The
exact nature of the obligation owed by the guarantor to the lender depends on
the construction of the contract of guarantee, but the liability of the
guarantor is usually made coterminous with that of the principal debtor.
Generally speaking, if the principal debt is void or unenforceable, the contract
of guarantee will likewise be void or unenforceable. Contracts of guarantee are
sometimes distinguished from contracts of indemnity. In a contract of indemnity, the indemnifier
assumes a primary obligation to repay the debt, and is liable regardless of the
liability of the principal debtor. The
distinction between contracts of guarantee and of indemnity ought not to be overemphasized.
Applying the principle of co-extensiveness, the limitation period on the
guarantee lapses when the limitation period lapses on the principal obligations.
-Canadian Supreme Court case of Communities
Economic Development Fund v Canadian Pickles Corp (1991) 3 S.C.R. 388 (S.C.C.)
5.
It results from the definition of a surety’s engagement, as
being accessory to a principal obligation, that the extinction of the principal
obligation necessarily induces that of the surety; it being of the nature of an
accessory obligation, that it cannot exist without its principal; therefore, wherever the
principal is discharged, in whatever manner it may be, the surety is discharged
likewise; for the essence of the obligation being, that the surety is only obliged
on behalf of a principal debtor, he
therefore is no longer obliged, when there is no longer any principal
debtor for whom he is obliged.
-Australian High Court
case of McDonald & Anor v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933)48 C.L.R 457
6.
There are however authorities that have departed from this approach and the pronouncements therein
imply or suggest that in cases involving demand guarantee, the liability of the
surety is indefinite.
7.
In the English Court of Appeal case of Bradford Old Bank Limited v Sutcliffe (1918)2
KB 833 , it was held that there was no cause of action against the
guarantor till after demand and the plea of the Statute of Limitations failed
in that case.
8.
In the Malaysian Federal Court case of Wee Kee Puan v OCBC Ltd (1982) 1 MLJ 64 it was similarly held, and applying the
principle in Bradford’s case, that
the cause of action against a person who stood as a surety for an overdraft
facility only accrues when a demand for repayment is made to the surety.
9.
The cases of Bradford and
Wee Kee Puan seem to propound the
concept of indefinite liability whereas the apex courts in other jurisdictions,
such as India, Canada and Australia subscribe to the principle of
co-extensiveness. However, in all fairness, the courts in the two
abovementioned cases were not called to answer the question of what happens if
the demand was made after the principal debt becomes time-barred.
10.
Coming
back to our hypothetical bankers and borrowers and surety, if the debt by
Borrower Y to Banker X had become time-barred on 01.07.1999, applying the strict
principle of co-extensiveness, likewise the demand made by Bank X on 01.12.2001
for the first time on Surety Z should not be valid or enforceable.
11.
In an
October 2009 lecture entitled “ON
THE HOOK? RELEASE OF THE SURETY” by Timothy Fancourt QC of Falcon Chambers
in London ( Vice-Chairman of the Chancery Bar Association ), a very interesting
point was mentioned by this learned author:-
“The first issue in
any case where a claim is to be made against a “surety” is therefore to decide
what the surety covenants mean, and to identify the nature of the claim that is
to be brought against the surety. Rather like the distinction between a licence
and a tenancy, the difference between a guarantee on the one hand and a primary obligation or indemnity on the other
is one of substance and not mere language. If the substance of the contract
recognizes that there is another person who is primarily liable to the
creditor, and that the surety’s liability is dependent on default by that
person, the contract is in substance one of guarantee, even if the phrase “as a principal
debtor” appears in it. Similarly, any so-called indemnity or on-demand
liability that gives rise to a claim that is co-extensive with and dependent on
the liability of the defaulting principal is likely to be a guarantee in
substance.”
12.
In
the English Court of Appeal case of Stadium Finance Co v Helm (1965) 109 SJ 471,
Lord Denning M.R. laid down the test to be applied in making the distinction
between an indemnity and a guarantee and applied the principle of
co-extensiveness in making that
distinction:-
“The test was whether, as between two people, one of
the two was under a primary liability to perform the obligation, while the
other’s obligation was secondary only. If so, it was a contract of guarantee
and not of indemnity. One always looked to see if there was a primary and
secondary obligation, or two primary obligations. Clause (1) of this document
was a contract of guarantee, It was something which the customer ought to pay
and had not paid…the whole burden of this document was that it was a guarantee, to come into force if
the principal debtor defaulted and to the extent of his default.. This being a
guarantee as a whole, it was not enforceable against the guarantor, and the
principle debtor was not liable because he was an infant.”
CONCLUSION
13.
Although
it can be argued that a demand guarantee situation is allowed in Malaysia in
light of the wordings in Section 81 of the Contracts Act 1950 “unless it is
otherwise provided by the contract”, it is also arguable that in allowing such
a demand guarantee situation to become
an exception to Section 81 of the Contracts Act 1950 or to the law of surety in
the country, the Malaysian courts seem to have deviated from the basic
principle of ‘co-extensive
liability” underlying the law of surety.
14.
In
this regard, until there is a decision from the apex Court of Malaysia
clarifying this position or even possibly an amendment to the Limitation Act
1953, the law in Malaysia appears to be that there is indefinite liability in a
demand guarantee situation even if the liability of the principal borrower is
no more in existence.
15.
On
this note, perhaps, it would be wise, in terms of social responsibility, that
if financial institutions wished to overcome the principle of co-extensive
liability to impose a primary obligation on its surety, such a clause should be
made clear to the potential sureties, bearing in mind that most people/sureties
do not intend to assume or subject themselves
to principal obligations or assume the responsibility of being liable
indefinitely. If this is not made clear, essentially, it would go against all
trite principles of contract law if the courts were to allow , unilaterally, a
change in the intention of parties and ‘convert’ a guarantee into an indemnity.
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