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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Oraki & Anor v Bramston & Anor [2017] EWCA Civ 403 (24 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/403.html Cite as: [2017] BPIR 1021, [2017] WLR(D) 377, [2018] 3 WLR 569, [2017] EWCA Civ 403 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
Mrs Justice Proudman
Nos 2617 and 2618 of 2005
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
____________________
SHEIDA ORAKI ARDESHIR ORAKI |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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(1) TIMOTHY BRAMSTON (2) IAN DEFTY |
Respondent |
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The First Appellant did not appear and was not represented
John Briggs (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 6, 7 and 8 December 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice David Richards:
Introduction
The proceedings between Dean & Dean and the appellants
Chronology of the bankruptcies
The claim against the respondents
"failed to bring the Claimants' bankruptcies to an end in an expeditious manner so as to minimise the fees and charges payable from the Claimant's estates and/or the Defendants passively or actively obstructed the Claimant's efforts to bring their bankruptcies to an end in an expeditious manner. In particular, the Defendants failed to cooperate with three insolvency practitioners appointed by the Claimants to liaise with them. This had the effect of precluding the possibility of the bankruptcies is [sic] being resolved under section 282(1)(b) of the Insolvency Act 1986 at an early stage."
Proudman J's judgment
The issues on the appeal
Annulment of a bankruptcy: the law
"The court may annul a bankruptcy order if it at any time appears to the court-
(a) that, on any grounds existing at the time the order was made, the order ought not to have been made, or
(b) that, to the extent required by the rules, the bankruptcy debts and the expenses of the bankruptcy have all, since the making of the order, been either paid or secured for the satisfaction of the court."
First ground: the claim that the Respondents unnecessarily prolonged the bankruptcies by failing to use the available cash resources
"57 On 27 September 2007 Mrs Wilson received a call from John Hynds of Barclays Bank plc saying that Dr Oraki had opened an account in August 2007 into which £156,369 had been deposited on 25 September 2007 and that Dr Oraki had tried to transfer £120,000 from the account. It transpired that the funds had come from the sale of a property, 22 Simpson Road, Hounslow, registered at the time of her bankruptcy in Dr Oraki's sole name. This property had not been disclosed to the official receiver, even on the basis that Dr Oraki had no beneficial interest in it.
58 At the hearing seeking a private examination Dr Oraki sought unsuccessfully to adduce a witness statement which said that the property had come from Dr Oraki's mother's estate which belonged jointly to Dr Oraki, her brothers and her sister and that her brothers and sister would bring proceedings to reclaim the money. The trustee considered that he could not conclusively decide that the £156,369 was part of the bankruptcy estate because of Dr Oraki's assertion that the funds were subject to a trust. On 18 October 2007 Salans wrote to Dr Oraki on behalf of the trustee again asking for an interview and saying that it was impossible for the trustee to be able to determine whether the moneys in the account belonged to the bankruptcy estate or not. The letter sets out in detail the kind of information needed by the trustee to make such a determination, such as a copy of Dr Oraki's mother's will. Such information has never been provided."
Mrs Wilson, to whom the judge refers in [57] was an assistant to Mr Bramston working on the bankruptcies and Salans were the solicitors acting for Mr Bramston and then Mr Defty.
"I was discharged from the bankruptcy on 10 January 2007. On a visit to the UK I went to Barclays Bank and showed a letter of discharge and opened a new account. I have made some transactions on the new account, but on 20 September £157,000 came into the account from my mother's estate, which belongs jointly to me, my brothers and sister. Now, Barclays Bank has told me SALANS have written to them to freeze the account. The trustee improperly and unlawfully intercepted funds in my account. The funds on my account are in trust for my brothers and sister and me, in equal shares, arising from my mother's death last year. I expect my brothers and sister will apply to the court for a court order to secure and obtain these funds."
"80. Were the Orakis obviously solvent so that cash assets could have been used to defray the bankruptcy debts without recourse to any of the real properties?
81. I do not accept Mr French's contention that the money in the Insolvency Services account could have been used to defray the bankruptcy debts. Dr Oraki insisted that she only owned one-fifth of those moneys [this should be one-sixth]; she did not explain how the alleged trust came about; she did not prove the ownership of the moneys and she did not produce any proof that the true beneficial owners were willing to use the moneys to pay the Orakis' bankruptcy debts. I do not therefore consider that the trustee could or should simply have assumed without more that 22 Simpson Road belonged beneficially to Dr Oraki, particularly as this is at odds with her oral evidence that it did not and that was why she did not disclose it to the official receiver. Nor do I consider that Dr Oraki can rely on a waiver from her siblings as there was none."
Ground 2: the claim that the respondents unnecessarily prolonged the bankruptcies by obstruction of the appellants' applications to annul their bankruptcies
Chronology relevant to Ground 2
"You need to take renewed advice in your position what type of Applications you're pursuing. My comments now are only on the basis of the payment in full. I will write to you setting out the sum you need to pay to discharge all the known liabilities and debts. That will include interest, it will include everything, it will be a large figure at the end of the day. For you to get annulment it will be necessary to you to pay that sum into court, then you can dispute any of the sums thereafter and they can be dealt with by you after that event. In the event that you pay the sum I require to be paid in, I won't object to the annulment. I'm in a different position having met with you than I was before, and so we can now progress to the next step.
It's important for you to do it as soon as possible because you don't want my costs racking up further than they have done at the moment. I will tell you what my costs are, I'm not going to explain it now, but I will in the schedule I produce, I will show you what my costs are at that particular point in time.
I would suggest take your own advice, but I'd suggest to you that you make your disputes after the event not before the event. And your solicitor can deal with that aspect on how to deal with the arrangement post the annulment."
(i) the petition debt of £20,052.38, comprising the sums payable pursuant to the 2004 judgment, that is: £5,000 on account of the claim for fees that was the subject-matter of the action, £3858.75 being the summarily assessed costs of the hearing at first instance, and £11,193.63 being the summarily assessed costs of the appeal dismissed by Judge Wakefield in October 2004;
(ii) the unassessed costs of £15,428.40 as petitioning creditors; and
(iii) £14,814.14 as the balance of their fees that were the subject-matter of the action.
"It is an abuse of the process for the continuation of these proceedings against us which are not justified and in view of the above we are now requesting the Court to review/annul and set aside all judgments which have been obtained by Mr Mireskandari & his firm at the Courts own jurisdiction, the removal of the trustee and for the restitution of all our properties."
"22. The Trustee has a duty to realise assets – he can apply at any stage for directions. He has had no notice of her application. He could seek directions. At the moment he says his duty is to get in and distribute the estate.
23. I have sympathy with her, but there is no live application and numerous applications before were unsuccessful and the position in relation to Dr. Oraki has not moved on. I need to apply Section 335A of the Insolvency Act 1986. There is no information before me to impede the Trustee's application.
24. The presumption is in favour of the Trustee after one year. There are no exceptional circumstances before me. I therefore consider that the creditors' needs outweigh all other considerations. The realisation of two properties rather than five [sic] could be proportionate.
25. Accordingly, I make the Order for possession in relation to 68 Gladstone Road and 375 Bury New Road,
26. In relation to Dr. Oraki's application I have been told that she could pay £200,000 very quickly but does not want to as a matter of principal [sic]. She wants to fight to the end. She does not trust the Trustee and therefore is not going to pay him. That leaves her with very little room to manoeuvre. At this stage I am bound to make an order for possession. Should those Orders be suspended?
27. Her Application is based on facts not before this Court at the moment. I have asked the Trustee's solicitors what to do and he says suspend the Order in order to allow her to make the application."
"We understand that on 26 November 2008 Mr Registrar Nicholls ordered that the applications for leave, rather than being dealt with by way of box work, be listed for hearing at the same time as the bankrupt's application for a stay of those Possession Orders. We understand that the Registrar also ordered that the bankrupt file evidence in support of her application for a stay before the same would be listed for consideration by the Court, but that to date she has failed to do so.
In those circumstances we are somewhat concerned that the trustee applications for leave to enforce are accordingly held in limbo and could possibly remain so indefinitely if the bankrupt fails to submit evidence in support of her own applications as directed by the Court.
In these circumstances, and given the history of this matter and the fact that it is quite possible that the bankrupt will never submit evidence in support of her own application, we would ask that the trustee's application for leave to enforce be dealt with as a totally separate issue, and no longer linked to the bankrupt's own application. We would also ask if in those circumstances, as is the usual course, the trustee applications for leave to enforce could be dealt with as box work, rather than listed for hearing."
"Please could you confirm that you have been made aware that the Orakis' applications to set aside the Brentford County Court judgments against them are due to be heard in that court on 24 April 2009 at 11.30am. You will appreciate that it is in your interests to defend those applications as if the Orakis are successful and then successfully apply for the bankruptcy orders against them to be annulled there is a strong possibility that the costs of the Trustee in both bankruptcies (now running at many tens of thousands of pounds) could be sought against your personally."
"8. I have considered whilst looking at this, the balance of justice. I think I have to in the exercise of my discretion. It is I think certainly the case that Mr and Dr Oraki feel very badly served by what has happened in terms of bankruptcy. They have said consistently that Dr Mireskandari is a fraudster. They feel that the action taken against him by The Law Society proves in effect that they are right. Unfortunately, it does nothing of the sort because this application is premature. It may well be the case that The Law Society will strip Mr Mireskandari down; I cannot pre-empt that. It may well be the case that this will have a retrospect effect on whether or not he can charge; again I cannot pre-determine that. It may well be that Dr Mireskandari will be exonerated.
9. From that point of view it seems to me that the application based on those facts is premature in the extreme. It may well have legs but at the moment I do not think I can make any determination based on mere allegations. I also do not think looking at it that the application and appeal to the Court of Appeal has any realistic chance of success as it stands. On that basis and notwithstanding what I accept is a genuine feeling by Dr Oraki and Mr Oraki that they have not been well served, I am not going to adjourn the matter until the hearing in the Court of Appeal for the reasons I have given and secondly having considered everything, I am going to dismiss the application to annul as it is premature."
The appellants' case on Ground 2
"The so-called new evidence is as follows, in summary, and it is not in very choate form. It is alleged that Dr, or Mr Mireskandari was convicted of some form of crime, or fraud, concerning telesales in the United States of America prior to 1999 and that had Dr Oraki and Mr Oraki known this they would never have used him. Mr Mireskandari or Dr Mireskandari was a solicitor who was apparently qualified in 2000, having previously acted a trainee. His practising certificate was suspended on 2008. I am so informed by Mr Tehrani and I am going to assume, just for the purpose of the case today, that those facts are true. Furthermore, that the reasons for the suspension of his certificate in 2008 have to do with other alleged depredations, not seemingly the subject matter of the conviction."
Issues of law
"(1) Where on an application under this section the court is satisfied-
(a) that the trustee of a bankrupt's estate has misapplied or retained, or became accountable for, any money or other property comprised in the bankrupt's estate, or
(b) that a bankrupt's estate has suffered any loss in consequence of any misfeasance or breach of fiduciary or other duty by a trustee in the carrying out of his functions the court may order the trustee, for the benefit of the estate, to repay, restore or account for money or other property (together with interest at such rate as the court thinks just) or, as the case may require, to pay such sum by way of compensation in respect of the misfeasance or breach of fiduciary or other duty as the court thinks just.
This is without prejudice to any liability arising apart from this section."
(2) An application under this section may be made by the official receiver, the Secretary of State, a creditor of the bankrupt or (whether or not there is, or is likely to be, a surplus for the purpose of section 330(5) (final distribution)) the bankrupt himself.
But the leave of the court is required for the making of an application if it is to be made by the bankrupt or if it is to be made after the trustee has had his release under section 299."
"33 I observe that it would be inconsistent with the requirement that the permission of the court must be given if the bankrupt had an unfettered right to take proceedings against his trustee. In any event there is no need for the bankrupt to have a general right of action based on a common law duty which would conflict with the statutory regime of rights, for example, sections 303, 304, 325(2), 326(3) and 363 of the 1986 Act.
34 I do not therefore consider that there is a common law duty in negligence apart from the statute."
"Where the official receiver or the trustee has his release under this section, he shall, with effect from the time specified in the preceding provisions of this section, be discharged from all liability both in respect of acts or omissions of his in the administration of the estate and otherwise in relation to his conduct as trustee.
But nothing in this section prevents the exercise, in relation to a person who has had his release under this section, of the court's powers under section 304.
Conclusion
Lord Justice McCombe:
The Master of the Rolls: