- Banking & financial disputes
- Financial services
Longer Reads
Equity of Redemption, Repo Structures, and the Limits of Contractual Drafting
4 minute read
Published 4 June 2026
The Commercial Court’s decision in Shukla v St James Bank & Trust Company Ltd [2026] EWHC 851 (Comm)1., handed down on 14 April 2026, is one of the most significant recent authorities on the distinction between secured lending arrangements and sale-and-repurchase (“repo”) transactions. The case also provides substantial guidance on the continued vitality of the equitable doctrine preventing “clogs” on the equity of redemption, the law of tender in repayment of secured loans, and the circumstances in which a lender is under an implied duty to cooperate in facilitating repayment.
Recap of the key terminology
Secured lending v repo transactions
In secured financing agreements the borrower will grant a security interest over certain assets in favour of the lender. Those assets are known as “collateral”. If the borrower fails to repay the loan, the lender can seize and sell the asset to recover their funds. A common example is a legal charge over property.
Conversely, a genuine repo transaction involves the ownership of securities being transferred outright, typically for liquidity or financing purposes, with the seller agreeing to repurchase equivalent securities at a later date. For example, A might sell UK Gilts to B to raise cash, on the agreement that A will buy the UK Gilts back at a specific date in the future (at a higher price).
“Clogs” on the equity of redemption
The equity of redemption is one of the oldest and most fundamental doctrines in English equity, which prevents oppressive forfeiture through recognising the mortgagor’s continuing right to redeem the property upon payment of their debt, even after the contractual redemption date has passed. Accordingly, a lender cannot transform a security arrangement into an outright acquisition of the secured property merely by drafting provisions designed to extinguish the borrower’s redemption rights.
A “clog” refers to any term or condition in a loan agreement which restricts, prevents or penalises a borrower from fully repaying their debt and recovering their property over which the debt was secured. This may include terms which confer on the lender collateral advantages inconsistent with the borrower’s continuing right to redeem.
What happened in Shukla v St James Bank?
The Claimant (Mr Shukla) entered into an arrangement with the Defendant, St James Bank & Trust Company Ltd (the Bank) pursuant to which funds were advanced to him against the transfer of certain listed shares. Mr Shukla was the borrower and the Bank the lender. The legal documentation was drafted in a manner intended by the Bank to characterise the arrangement as a repo transaction rather than a conventional secured loan.
Under the structure adopted:
At the time of the dispute, the shares were worth approximately US$18 million, while the outstanding indebtedness was around US$2 million.
The Claimant attempted to repay the facility and redeem the shares, but the Bank refused to cooperate with repayment and maintained that the Claimant had no surviving equitable proprietary rights in the shares. The Bank argued that the Claimant had sold the shares with an option to repurchase and that no secured loan agreement existed.
Following a subsequent fall in the value of the shares, the Claimant alleged losses of approximately US$15 million.
The litigation therefore centred on four principal issues:
1) Whether the arrangement was properly characterised as a secured loan or a repo transaction.
2) Whether the doctrine prohibiting clogs on the equity of redemption applied.
3) Whether the Claimant had made a valid tender of repayment.
4 )Whether the Bank owed an implied duty to cooperate in facilitating repayment and redemption.
More fundamentally, the case raised a profound question of principle: can a lender structure a transaction in such a way as to entirely extinguish the borrower’s equitable right to redeem security upon repayment?
The Commercial Court answered that question decisively: on its true construction, the agreement was a loan secured by shares rather than a true repo transaction.
Accordingly, the equitable doctrine against clogs on the equity of redemption applied, rendering void contractual provisions purporting to exclude the borrower’s right to redeem the shares upon repayment. The court also held that the Bank was subject to an implied duty to cooperate in the repayment process.
1. Substance over form
A secured loan creates a security interest over property while preserving the borrower’s equitable right to redeem the security upon repayment of the debt. By contrast, a true repo agreement involves an outright transfer of ownership, coupled with a contractual obligation or option to repurchase the asset at a later date.
The distinction is critical because equity traditionally intervenes to protect borrowers in mortgage or security transactions. If the transaction is genuinely a sale, however, equitable intervention is significantly curtailed.
The court adopted a substance-over-form analysis. Although the documents contained language consistent with an outright transfer of ownership (a repo transaction), the court examined the commercial realities of the arrangement.
Several features indicated a secured loan:
The court concluded that the arrangement was, in substance, a secured lending transaction. The repo terminology used in the documentation could not displace the true legal nature of the bargain.
2. The Equity of Redemption and the Doctrine Against Clogs
Because the court characterised the arrangement as a secured loan, the equitable doctrine necessarily applied. The provisions purporting to extinguish the Claimant’s equitable rights were therefore void as impermissible clogs on the equity of redemption.
The judgment indicates that courts will focus on:
Where a purported repo functions economically as security for a debt, equitable doctrines may still apply notwithstanding sophisticated drafting.
3. Tender and the Borrower’s Right to Redeem
An important aspect of the judgment concerned whether the Claimant had made a valid tender of repayment.
Traditionally, tender requires:
The Court found that the Claimant had, in substance, made a valid tender of repayment, or at the very least had taken all reasonable and necessary steps to repay the outstanding indebtedness.
It considered the reality of the repayment attempts, including the Claimant’s willingness, readiness and ability to discharge the debt.
The judgment suggests that a lender cannot avoid a borrower’s redemption rights merely by refusing to engage with repayment attempts or by insisting on technical obstacles that effectively frustrate repayment. Equity looks to substance rather than form, particularly where the consequence of refusal would be the lender obtaining a windfall through retention of valuable collateral.
4. Whether the Bank owed an implied duty to cooperate in facilitating repayment and redemption
The Court found that the Bank owed an implied contractual duty to cooperate in facilitating repayment and redemption of the security. Such a duty was necessary to give the contract business efficacy and to ensure that the Claimant’s right of redemption was not rendered illusory. In practical terms, if a borrower could only redeem the security through the lender’s participation or administrative cooperation, the lender could not simply refuse to engage and thereby prevent redemption altogether.
The implied duty appears to have required the Bank to:
The Court concluded that the Bank’s refusal to cooperate with the Claimant to enable repayment of the loan amounted to a breach of the terms of the Loan Agreement. Damages to be assessed.
Key takeaways
The decision is likely to become a leading authority in an area where commercial innovation has increasingly tested the boundaries of long-established equitable principles.
Related content
Longer Reads
Equity of Redemption, Repo Structures, and the Limits of Contractual Drafting
Published 4 June 2026
The Commercial Court’s decision in Shukla v St James Bank & Trust Company Ltd [2026] EWHC 851 (Comm)1., handed down on 14 April 2026, is one of the most significant recent authorities on the distinction between secured lending arrangements and sale-and-repurchase (“repo”) transactions. The case also provides substantial guidance on the continued vitality of the equitable doctrine preventing “clogs” on the equity of redemption, the law of tender in repayment of secured loans, and the circumstances in which a lender is under an implied duty to cooperate in facilitating repayment.
Recap of the key terminology
Secured lending v repo transactions
In secured financing agreements the borrower will grant a security interest over certain assets in favour of the lender. Those assets are known as “collateral”. If the borrower fails to repay the loan, the lender can seize and sell the asset to recover their funds. A common example is a legal charge over property.
Conversely, a genuine repo transaction involves the ownership of securities being transferred outright, typically for liquidity or financing purposes, with the seller agreeing to repurchase equivalent securities at a later date. For example, A might sell UK Gilts to B to raise cash, on the agreement that A will buy the UK Gilts back at a specific date in the future (at a higher price).
“Clogs” on the equity of redemption
The equity of redemption is one of the oldest and most fundamental doctrines in English equity, which prevents oppressive forfeiture through recognising the mortgagor’s continuing right to redeem the property upon payment of their debt, even after the contractual redemption date has passed. Accordingly, a lender cannot transform a security arrangement into an outright acquisition of the secured property merely by drafting provisions designed to extinguish the borrower’s redemption rights.
A “clog” refers to any term or condition in a loan agreement which restricts, prevents or penalises a borrower from fully repaying their debt and recovering their property over which the debt was secured. This may include terms which confer on the lender collateral advantages inconsistent with the borrower’s continuing right to redeem.
What happened in Shukla v St James Bank?
The Claimant (Mr Shukla) entered into an arrangement with the Defendant, St James Bank & Trust Company Ltd (the Bank) pursuant to which funds were advanced to him against the transfer of certain listed shares. Mr Shukla was the borrower and the Bank the lender. The legal documentation was drafted in a manner intended by the Bank to characterise the arrangement as a repo transaction rather than a conventional secured loan.
Under the structure adopted:
At the time of the dispute, the shares were worth approximately US$18 million, while the outstanding indebtedness was around US$2 million.
The Claimant attempted to repay the facility and redeem the shares, but the Bank refused to cooperate with repayment and maintained that the Claimant had no surviving equitable proprietary rights in the shares. The Bank argued that the Claimant had sold the shares with an option to repurchase and that no secured loan agreement existed.
Following a subsequent fall in the value of the shares, the Claimant alleged losses of approximately US$15 million.
The litigation therefore centred on four principal issues:
1) Whether the arrangement was properly characterised as a secured loan or a repo transaction.
2) Whether the doctrine prohibiting clogs on the equity of redemption applied.
3) Whether the Claimant had made a valid tender of repayment.
4 )Whether the Bank owed an implied duty to cooperate in facilitating repayment and redemption.
More fundamentally, the case raised a profound question of principle: can a lender structure a transaction in such a way as to entirely extinguish the borrower’s equitable right to redeem security upon repayment?
The Commercial Court answered that question decisively: on its true construction, the agreement was a loan secured by shares rather than a true repo transaction.
Accordingly, the equitable doctrine against clogs on the equity of redemption applied, rendering void contractual provisions purporting to exclude the borrower’s right to redeem the shares upon repayment. The court also held that the Bank was subject to an implied duty to cooperate in the repayment process.
1. Substance over form
A secured loan creates a security interest over property while preserving the borrower’s equitable right to redeem the security upon repayment of the debt. By contrast, a true repo agreement involves an outright transfer of ownership, coupled with a contractual obligation or option to repurchase the asset at a later date.
The distinction is critical because equity traditionally intervenes to protect borrowers in mortgage or security transactions. If the transaction is genuinely a sale, however, equitable intervention is significantly curtailed.
The court adopted a substance-over-form analysis. Although the documents contained language consistent with an outright transfer of ownership (a repo transaction), the court examined the commercial realities of the arrangement.
Several features indicated a secured loan:
The court concluded that the arrangement was, in substance, a secured lending transaction. The repo terminology used in the documentation could not displace the true legal nature of the bargain.
2. The Equity of Redemption and the Doctrine Against Clogs
Because the court characterised the arrangement as a secured loan, the equitable doctrine necessarily applied. The provisions purporting to extinguish the Claimant’s equitable rights were therefore void as impermissible clogs on the equity of redemption.
The judgment indicates that courts will focus on:
Where a purported repo functions economically as security for a debt, equitable doctrines may still apply notwithstanding sophisticated drafting.
3. Tender and the Borrower’s Right to Redeem
An important aspect of the judgment concerned whether the Claimant had made a valid tender of repayment.
Traditionally, tender requires:
The Court found that the Claimant had, in substance, made a valid tender of repayment, or at the very least had taken all reasonable and necessary steps to repay the outstanding indebtedness.
It considered the reality of the repayment attempts, including the Claimant’s willingness, readiness and ability to discharge the debt.
The judgment suggests that a lender cannot avoid a borrower’s redemption rights merely by refusing to engage with repayment attempts or by insisting on technical obstacles that effectively frustrate repayment. Equity looks to substance rather than form, particularly where the consequence of refusal would be the lender obtaining a windfall through retention of valuable collateral.
4. Whether the Bank owed an implied duty to cooperate in facilitating repayment and redemption
The Court found that the Bank owed an implied contractual duty to cooperate in facilitating repayment and redemption of the security. Such a duty was necessary to give the contract business efficacy and to ensure that the Claimant’s right of redemption was not rendered illusory. In practical terms, if a borrower could only redeem the security through the lender’s participation or administrative cooperation, the lender could not simply refuse to engage and thereby prevent redemption altogether.
The implied duty appears to have required the Bank to:
The Court concluded that the Bank’s refusal to cooperate with the Claimant to enable repayment of the loan amounted to a breach of the terms of the Loan Agreement. Damages to be assessed.
Key takeaways
The decision is likely to become a leading authority in an area where commercial innovation has increasingly tested the boundaries of long-established equitable principles.
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