Case about disputes over a contract on the sale of commercial houses
2018-05-01
Case about disputes over a contract on the sale of commercial houses
Tang Long, Liu Xinlong, Ma Zhongtai, and Wang
Honggang v. Xinjiang Erdos Yanhai Real Estate Development Co., Ltd.
(Issued on December 28, 2016 as deliberated and adopted by the Judicial
Committee of the Supreme People's Court)
Keywords: civil; a contract on the sale of commercial houses; a loan contract;
liquidation of debts; legal effect; examination
Key Points of Judgment
Where both parties to a loan contract terminate the loan contract upon
negotiation and establish a new contract on the sale of commercial houses, the
principal and interest of the loan is transformed into the paid house purchase
fund upon account checking and clearing, the aforesaid arrangement does not
fall under the prohibitive circumstance as prescribed in Article 186 of the Property Law of the People's Republic of China,
and the purpose for the conclusion of the contract on the sale of commercial
houses is not “guarantee for the private lending contract” as prescribed in Article 24 of the Provisions of the Supreme People's Court on
Several Issues concerning the Application of Law in the Trial of Private
Lending Cases. Where there is no circumstance as prescribed in Article 52 of the Contract Law of the People's Republic of China,
the contract on the sale of commercial house has legal effect. However, the
people's court should examine the amount of the principal and interest of the
loan that has transformed into the paid house purchase fund on the basis of the
loan contract and other evidence, so as to avoid the party's transformation of
high interest exceeding the ceiling protected by the law to the paid house
purchase fund.
Legal Provisions
Article 186 of the Property Law of the People's Republic of China
Article 52 of the Contract Law of the People's Republic of China
Basic Facts
Plaintiffs Tang Long, Liu Xinlong, Ma Zhongtai, and Wang Honggang alleged that:
As agreed in the contract concluded by and between both parties, Xinjiang Erdos
Yanhai Real Estate Development Co., Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as “Yanhai
Company”) should deliver houses conforming to the stipulations of the contract
to these four persons on September 30, 2014. However, up to now, Yanhai Company
refused to perform the obligation of delivering the houses. Therefore,
plaintiffs requested the Higher People's Court of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous
Region to order that: (1) Yanhai Company should pay Tang Long, Liu Xinlong, Ma
Zhongtai, and Wang Honggang the liquidated damages of CNY 60 million; (2)
Yanhai Company should bear the losses of CNY 416,300 to Tang Long, Liu Xinlong,
Ma Zhongtai, and Wang Honggang in the process of claiming rights; and (3)
Yanhai Company should bear all litigation costs of the case.
Yanhai Company contended that: Tang Long, Liu Xinlong, Ma Zhongtai, and Wang
Honggang should file separate lawsuits. These four persons and Yanhai Company
had no intention of purchasing and selling houses, the contract on the sale of
commercial houses was actually a loan contract in the name of a sale contract,
and it was guarantee for the loan contract, the stipulation thereof violated
the provisions of Article 40 of the Guarantee Law of the People's Republic of China
and Article 186 of the Property Law of the People's Republic of China.
The contract on the sale of commercial houses concluded by and between both parties
was obviously unfair by taking advantage of Yanhai Company's difficulties. The
liquidated damages and losses claimed by these four persons also lacked factual
basis.
After a trial, the Higher People's Court of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
found that: In 2003, Tang Long, Liu Xinlong, Ma Zhongtai, and Wang Honggang
concluded multiple loan contracts with Yanhai Company respectively and they
obtained the creditor's rights of the loans borrowed by Yanhai Company, CNY 260
million in total, by means of lending and accepting the creditor's rights
transferred from other persons. In order to provide guarantee for the
performance of such loan contracts, the four persons and Yanhai Company
concluded multiple contracts on the presale of commercial houses and they
handled formalities for recordation and registration at the local real estate
transaction management center. After the creditor's rights were successively
mature, since Yanhai Company failed to repay the principal and interest of the
loans, it was confirmed upon account checking between both parties that Yanhai
Company still owed these four persons CNY 361,398,017.78, which was the
principal and interest of the loans. Subsequently, both parties concluded a new
contract on the sale of commercial houses, which stipulated that Yanhai Company
sold houses under its name to these four persons, the principal and interest of
the aforesaid loans were transformed into the paid house purchase funds, and
the remaining house purchase funds of CNY 38,601,982.22 would be paid in a lump
sum to Yanhai Company after the formalities for the property transfer
registration of all subject matter were handled. The sheets of account checking
between Tang Long and other three persons and Yanhai Company submitted by Tang
Long and other three persons showed that the monthly interest rates of the
loans between both parties were 3% and 4%, the overdue interest rate was 10%,
and compound interest was also calculated.
Judgment
On April 27, 2015, the Higher People's Court of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous
Region rendered a civil judgment (No. 2 [2015], First, Civil DivisionI, HPC,
Xinjiang) that: (1) Yanhai Company should pay Tang Long, Ma Zhongtai, Liu
Xinlong, and Wang Honggang the liquidated damages of CNY 9,275,057.23; (2)
Yanhai Company should pay Tang Long, Ma Zhongtai, Liu Xinlong, and Wang
Honggang the lawyer's fees of CNY 416,300; and (3) other claims of Tang Long,
Ma Zhongtai, Liu Xinlong, and Wang Honggang should be dismissed. The aforesaid
funds should be paid in a lump sum within ten days after the judgment came into
force. After the judgment was pronounced, Yanhai Company appealed on the
grounds that the sale contract concluded by and between both parties was
guarantee for the loan contract, it was not the true intention of both parties,
and the arrears included high interest. On October 8, 2015, the Supreme
People's Court rendered a civil judgment (No. 180 [2015], Final, Civil
DivisionI, Supreme People's Court) that: (1) The civil judgment (No. 2 [2015],
First, Civil DivisionI, HPC, Xinjiang) as rendered by the Higher People's Court
of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region should be vacated; and (2) The claims of
Tang Long, Liu Xinlong, Ma Zhongtai, and Wang Honggang should be dismissed.
Judgment's Reasoning
In the effective judgment, the Higher People's Court of Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region held that: Before the conclusion of the contract on the sale
of commercial houses in dispute, there were actual loan contracts between
Yanhai Company and Tang Long and other three persons and for the purpose of
performing such loan contracts, both parties concluded the corresponding
contract on the presale of commercial houses and handled the formalities for
the advance-notice registration of pre-sold commercial houses. However, the
contract on the sale of commercial houses in dispute was transformed from loan
contracts upon renegotiation and account checking under the circumstance where
Yanhai Company failed to repay the principal and interest of the loans. The
principal and interest of the loans have been transformed into the paid house
purchase funds, and the contract in dispute stipulated such rights and
obligations as house delivery, balance payment, and liability for breach of
contract. In addition to be based on the special legal provisions, the
establishment, alteration, or elimination of a civil legal relationship should
be formed through consistent intention of participants of the legal
relationship. In civil trading activities, it was not rare that the intention
of a party changed. The change in the intention should be permitted unless
otherwise prohibited by the special legal provisions. Upon consensus reached
between both parties, the loan contracts were terminated and a new contract on
the sale of commercial houses was established. It was not guarantee provided
for the performance of the loan contracts between both parties, but a
transaction arrangement for realizing the balance of both parties' rights and
obligations by means of selling the commercial houses owned by Yanhai Company to
Tang Long and other three creditors when the loan contracts were expired and it
was difficult for Yanhai Company to repay the debts. This transaction
arrangement did not violate the mandatory provisions of laws and administrative
regulations, did not fall under any prohibitive circumstance as prescribed in Article 186 of the Property Law of the People's Republic of China,
and was not governed by the provisions of Article 24
of the Provisions of the Supreme People's Court on
Several Issues concerning the Application of Law in the Trial of Private
Lending Cases. Respecting the subsequently-formed consistent
intention of the parties to change the nature of the legal relationship should
be the due intention for implementing the principle of freedom of contract. The
claim of Yanhai Company that the contract on the sale of commercial houses
involved was invalid should not be admitted.
However, under the circumstance where the contract on the sale of commercial
houses was confirmed legal and valid, since both parties acknowledged that the
paid house purchase funds under the contract was transformed from the principal
and interest of the original loans and Yanhai Company claimed that the amount
of arrears included high interest, when the party requested judicial
confirmation and protection of house buyers' contractual rights, the people's court
should examine the amount of loan principal and interest formed on the basis of
the actual performance of the loan contracts, so as to avoid the legalization
of illegal high interest obtained by the party through the conclusion of a
contract on the sale of commercial houses and by other means. It was found upon
examination that the method for calculating the interest of loans between both
parties has exceeded the upper limit of protection of private lending interest
rate as provided by the law. The amount of arrears between both parties
including high interest should not be confirmed according to the law. Since the
interest rate of loans protected by the law was obviously lower than the
interest rate confirmed in the account checking between both parties, it should
be determined that as house purchasers, Tang Long and other three persons have
not paid the house purchase funds in full amount as agreed in the contract and
Yanhai Company's failure to deliver the houses by the scheduled time should not
be deemed as breach of contract. The claims of Tang Long and other three
persons that Yanhai Company should pay the liquidated damages and lawyers' fees
on the factual basis that Yanhai Company's delayed delivery of houses
constituted breach of contract lacked legal and factual basis. The judgment of
first instance was erroneous in ordering that Yanhai Company should assume the
liability for breach of contract and pay the liquidated damages and lawyers'
fees, and the Higher People's Court of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
corrected it accordingly.
(Judges of the effective judgment: Xin Zhengyu, Pan Jie, and Shen Dandan)