“In 2024, Meenal, an entrepreneur, borrowed £500,000 from Cheshire Loans PLC to finance the purchase of a large grade II listed house, Northgate House. The loan was secured by way of a legal charge in favour of Cheshire Loans PLC and registered at the Land Registry. In February 2025, Meenal borrowed £120,000 from Renov8 Bank PLC to convert part of the building into a one-bedroom apartment. This loan was also secured by way of legal charge and registered at the Land Registry. By December 2025, the studio was 90% complete. Some elements lacked certification: a gas line had been run to a “Heritage Master 110” range cooker, and fire safety and acoustic works were partially signed off. Meenal had emails from two local agents suggesting a post completion value between £560,000–£620,000 depending on “tightness of finish” and “lettability of studio.” A third agent issued a desktop appraisal indicating £495,000–£520,000 “as is” and advising “auction may be prudent given listing and part complete status.” She had a renter ready to sign to an agreement to occupy the studio. Due to rising costs and a fall in consultancy income, Meenal fell into arrears on both loans by March 2026. In March 2026, Renov8 Bank PLC took possession of the property and instructed an estate agent, Chester Sellers, to sell it as quickly as possible. Chester Sellers marketed the estate for 10 days, then listed for auction with a reserve of £440,000. The auction was held 14 days after instruction and Northgate House sold for £452,500 to Leah Hart, a cash buyer. The catalogue described: “Period property with partially completed studio; buyer to satisfy themselves as to all consents; all fixtures and fittings included unless expressly excluded; no warranties.” After completion, removal contractors working for the buyer refused to let Meenal remove the range, citing the inclusion of fixtures and the auction contract. The cooker is a freestanding unit but not yet connected to gas and electricity, set within a bespoke island; it is bolted to a rear panel to prevent tip risk and is integrated with a matching flue canopy. A gas engineer says it can be disconnected “without material damage,” though patching/finishing would be needed. Photos taken by Meenal in 2025 show the cooker before the island was built; later photos show the integrated appearance. Meenal is dissatisfied. She argues Renov8 Bank PLC rushed to auction, ignored higher valuations contingent on completion, undersold during a temporary market dip, and misdescribed the property by not flagging the near complete compliance status and the ready to sign tenancy. She says the range cooker is a fitting. Renov8 Bank PLC says it acted in good faith, obtained a proper price for a part complete listed asset, and had no duty to complete works or to run a prolonged campaign. The buyer insists the cooker is a fixture included in the sale. Explain, with reference to relevant legal authority, the extent that: • Renov8 Bank PLC has met their legal duties to Meenal to act fairly and in good faith to obtain true market value in the sale of the estate; and • The large range cooker satisfies the purpose of annexation test.”

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Introduction

This essay analyses the legal position of Renov8 Bank PLC as mortgagee in possession when selling Northgate House following Meenal’s default. It considers first the equitable and statutory duties owed by a mortgagee exercising the power of sale, drawing on established authority to assess whether the bank’s rapid auction process satisfied the requirement to obtain the best price reasonably obtainable. The essay then turns to the classification of the Heritage Master 110 range cooker, applying the purpose-of-annexation test to determine whether it passed into the ownership of the purchaser as a fixture. The discussion remains confined to verified principles of English land law and the facts supplied in the scenario.

The Mortgagee’s Duty to Obtain True Market Value

A mortgagee’s power of sale arises under section 101 of the Law of Property Act 1925 once the mortgage money has become due. Equity nevertheless imposes an overriding duty to exercise that power in good faith and to take reasonable care to obtain the best price reasonably obtainable in the circumstances (Cuckmere Brick Co Ltd v Mutual Finance Ltd [1971] Ch 949). The duty is not one to secure the open-market value that would be achieved by a willing seller with unlimited time; rather, the mortgagee must act as a prudent owner would when forced to sell, having regard to the property’s condition and the prevailing market (Silven Properties Ltd v Royal Bank of Scotland plc [2004] 1 WLR 997).
In the present case Renov8 Bank PLC took possession in March 2026 after arrears accrued on both loans. It instructed agents to market the property for only ten days before proceeding to auction with a reserve of £440,000; the property realised £452,500. Meenal contends that higher valuations contingent on completion were ignored and that a longer marketing campaign would have yielded a better price. While the two local agents suggested post-completion figures of up to £620,000, the independent desktop appraisal of £495,000–£520,000 “as is” and the explicit recommendation that auction might be prudent given the listed status and incomplete works provide contemporaneous evidence that the bank’s chosen method was not unreasonable. The catalogue description accurately disclosed the part-complete nature of the studio and placed the burden on buyers to satisfy themselves as to consents. Such transparency is consistent with the duty not to misdescribe the property.
The short marketing period and the decision not to complete certification works must be viewed against the statutory background. Section 103 of the 1925 Act permits sale without notice once the power has arisen, and the courts have repeatedly held that a mortgagee is under no obligation to improve the security or to await a more favourable market (Tse Kwong Lam v Wong Chit Sen [1983] 1 WLR 1349). Consequently, while the sale price lies toward the lower end of the range advised, the process adopted by Renov8 Bank PLC appears to satisfy the comparatively modest standard of reasonable care required by authority. Whether that standard adequately protects mortgagors in volatile markets remains a matter of academic debate, yet the bank’s conduct does not appear to have crossed the threshold of bad faith or recklessness.

Classification of the Range Cooker under the Purpose-of-Annexation Test

The second issue concerns whether the range cooker passed to the purchaser as a fixture. The classic test remains that stated in Holland v Hodgson (1872) LR 7 CP 328: an article is a fixture if it is annexed to the land to any extent and the purpose of annexation was to benefit the land rather than the chattel itself. The degree of annexation is merely evidence of purpose; the ultimate question is objective intention (Elitestone Ltd v Morris [1997] 1 WLR 687).
The Heritage Master 110 is described as a freestanding unit that had not been connected to gas or electricity. Although bolted to a rear panel to satisfy safety regulations and integrated within a bespoke island and flue canopy, a qualified gas engineer confirmed that disconnection could be achieved without material damage to the fabric of the building. Photographs taken before the island was constructed reinforce the original character of the appliance as a moveable item. In Botham v TSB Bank plc (1996) 73 P & CR D1 the Court of Appeal emphasised that items capable of removal without lasting injury to the building ordinarily remain chattels unless a clear intention to make them part of the land is demonstrated. The scenario supplies no evidence that Meenal intended permanent incorporation; rather, the cooker’s integration appears functional and reversible. On balance, therefore, the purpose-of-annexation test indicates that the range remains a fitting belonging to Meenal and not a fixture included in the sale.

Conclusion

Renov8 Bank PLC appears to have discharged its equitable duty to Meenal by adopting a method of sale reasonably calculated to achieve the best price available for a part-complete listed property. The cooker, however, fails the purpose-of-annexation test and remains Meenal’s personal property. These conclusions follow directly from established statutory provisions and case authority applied to the facts supplied.

References

  • Botham v TSB Bank plc (1996) 73 P & CR D1.
  • Cuckmere Brick Co Ltd v Mutual Finance Ltd [1971] Ch 949.
  • Elitestone Ltd v Morris [1997] 1 WLR 687.
  • Holland v Hodgson (1872) LR 7 CP 328.
  • Law of Property Act 1925, ss.101 and 103.
  • Silven Properties Ltd v Royal Bank of Scotland plc [2004] 1 WLR 997.
  • Tse Kwong Lam v Wong Chit Sen [1983] 1 WLR 1349.

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“In 2024, Meenal, an entrepreneur, borrowed £500,000 from Cheshire Loans PLC to finance the purchase of a large grade II listed house, Northgate House. The loan was secured by way of a legal charge in favour of Cheshire Loans PLC and registered at the Land Registry. In February 2025, Meenal borrowed £120,000 from Renov8 Bank PLC to convert part of the building into a one-bedroom apartment. This loan was also secured by way of legal charge and registered at the Land Registry. By December 2025, the studio was 90% complete. Some elements lacked certification: a gas line had been run to a “Heritage Master 110” range cooker, and fire safety and acoustic works were partially signed off. Meenal had emails from two local agents suggesting a post completion value between £560,000–£620,000 depending on “tightness of finish” and “lettability of studio.” A third agent issued a desktop appraisal indicating £495,000–£520,000 “as is” and advising “auction may be prudent given listing and part complete status.” She had a renter ready to sign to an agreement to occupy the studio. Due to rising costs and a fall in consultancy income, Meenal fell into arrears on both loans by March 2026. In March 2026, Renov8 Bank PLC took possession of the property and instructed an estate agent, Chester Sellers, to sell it as quickly as possible. Chester Sellers marketed the estate for 10 days, then listed for auction with a reserve of £440,000. The auction was held 14 days after instruction and Northgate House sold for £452,500 to Leah Hart, a cash buyer. The catalogue described: “Period property with partially completed studio; buyer to satisfy themselves as to all consents; all fixtures and fittings included unless expressly excluded; no warranties.” After completion, removal contractors working for the buyer refused to let Meenal remove the range, citing the inclusion of fixtures and the auction contract. The cooker is a freestanding unit but not yet connected to gas and electricity, set within a bespoke island; it is bolted to a rear panel to prevent tip risk and is integrated with a matching flue canopy. A gas engineer says it can be disconnected “without material damage,” though patching/finishing would be needed. Photos taken by Meenal in 2025 show the cooker before the island was built; later photos show the integrated appearance. Meenal is dissatisfied. She argues Renov8 Bank PLC rushed to auction, ignored higher valuations contingent on completion, undersold during a temporary market dip, and misdescribed the property by not flagging the near complete compliance status and the ready to sign tenancy. She says the range cooker is a fitting. Renov8 Bank PLC says it acted in good faith, obtained a proper price for a part complete listed asset, and had no duty to complete works or to run a prolonged campaign. The buyer insists the cooker is a fixture included in the sale. Explain, with reference to relevant legal authority, the extent that: • Renov8 Bank PLC has met their legal duties to Meenal to act fairly and in good faith to obtain true market value in the sale of the estate; and • The large range cooker satisfies the purpose of annexation test.”

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