the value of its unsecured assets made it practically certain that it
would at least pay the interest and the annual instalments of prin-
cipal, and that the pinch, if any, would occur when the balance of
principal became due in 1949. But keeping in mind the value of
the mortgaged property compared to the amount of the debt ; that
without extensive alterations it would only be valuable for an
emporium and therefore would be difficult to sell ; that the mortgage
had still five years to run with a right to extend the term for a
further five years, so that if no default occurred the main balance
of the principal would not be recoverable for ten years (whereas the
most favoured term in 1939 was for three years); that it was not
an independent loan on mortgage but a means for securing the
balance of purchase money on a sale; that the rate of interest was
low compared to the current rate 5} per cent for such an advance ;
that the value of the personal covenant must be considered in the
light of the evidence that a purchaser of the debt would only have
regard to the value of the mortgaged property; that unless there
was default most of the principal would not be recoverable for ten
years and the assets securing the personal covenant were such that
they could seriously depreciate in value if the mortgagor suffered
adverse trading conditions ; that some of the assets were of problem-
atical value (as, for instance, shares in subsidiary companies), and
trade creditors competing for unsecured assets might increase ; it is
necessary, in my opinion, to discount appreciably the value of the
mortgage debt. Since Mr. Thompson valued the mortgaged property
in 1934 at £324,000, and he and Mr. Crammond value it, with
certain alterations, in 1939 at £327,000, it would appear to be unlikely
that it would decrease seriously in value by 1949. If, therefore,
a purchaser of the mortgage debt was prepared to pay £270,000,
the interest returned would be at the rate of 54 per cent per annum,
and he could expect to be repaid £50,000 by ten instalments of
principal, so that in 1949 he would have as security a property valued
at approximately £327,000 to secure a debt of £220,000 ; or, in other
words, the debt would then be approximately two-thirds of the
value of the property ; while, if the mortgagor did not exercise its
option to extend the term of the mortgage and only repaid the five
instalments due in the years 1939 to 1943, the principal would still
be reduced to £245,000 or approximately 75 per cent of its value,
which, Mr. Crammond said, would be the maximum percentage