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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Secretary of State for Trade and Industry v Hall & Anor [2006] EWHC 1995 (Ch) (28 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/1995.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1995 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRADE AND INDUSTRY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) KEN HALL (2) JOHN ANDREW HENRY NUTTALL |
Defendants |
____________________
The first Defendant did not attend and was not represented
Nigel Adams (Lay representative) for the 2nd Defendant
Hearing date: 29th & 30th June 2006
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Evans-Lombe :
"Ken Hall
He failed to ensure that Mercury maintained or preserved proper accounting records; alternatively he failed to deliver them to the Liquidator. As a consequence of this the liquidator is unable to establish or verify matters concerning the company's trading life and position including the following specific matters:
• Mercury's turnover cannot be established or verified, and nor can its expenditure. In particular it cannot be established or verified whether cheques totalling £180,419 and described in the bank statements as "Encashed cheque" or "Cash" were spent to the benefit of Mercury. Nor can the company's expenditure on wages, salaries and outsourced work be established or verified.
• The position regarding the company's compliance with its obligations regarding PAYE, NIC and VAT cannot be established or verified.
• Mercury's position regarding its liabilities to trade and expense creditors cannot be established or verified.
• The details of various transactions that appear to relate to property cannot be established or verified. Nor is it possible to establish or verify that these transactions were to the benefit of Mercury.
Jonathan Andrew Henry Nuttall
Mercury
(i) He abnegated his duties as a director of Mercury by failing either to be involved, or to be adequately involved, in the management of Mercury.
(ii) As a director of Mercury he abnegated his responsibilities to ensure that Mercury maintained or preserved proper accounting records; alternatively he failed to deliver them to the Liquidator. As a consequence of this the liquidator is unable to establish or verify matters concerning the company's trading life and position including the following specific matters:
Mercury's turnover cannot be established or verified, and nor can its expenditure. In particular it cannot be established or verified whether cheques totalling £180,419 and described in the bank statements as "Encashed cheque" or "Cash" were spent to the benefit of Mercury. Nor can the company's expenditure on wages, salaries and outsourced work be established or verified.
The position regarding the company's compliance with its obligations regarding PAYE, NIC and VAT cannot be established or verified.
Mercury's position regarding its liabilities to trade and expense creditors cannot be established or verified.
• The details of various transactions that appear to relate to property cannot be established or verified. Nor is it possible to establish or verify that these transactions were to the benefit of Mercury.
Legal Directors Limited
By reference to the matters set out in the draft affidavit of Mr John Jones, which l believe will be sworn and filed in these proceedings:
(iii) He caused Legal Directors Limited to fail to file at Companies House, as required by the Companies Act 1985, documents on behalf of the following companies: Walkers of Banbury 2000 Ltd; Shearing Limited; Pacifico Software Consultancy Limited; Vallis Vale Developments Limited; See More Business Limited; and Sunquest Holidays Mallorca Limited."
"FAILURES TO FILE DOCUMENTS
9. Legal Directors, being a director of the companies set out in the table below, was summonsed to appear at Cardiff Magistrates Court on 29 April 2003, in respect of allegations made against it by the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry and which are summarised in the table that follows.
Company Name | Summary of Allegation |
Shearing Limited (JALJJ1 pages 1-4). | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of the accounts of the company in respect of its financial year ended 31/12/00. |
Shearing Limited | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of the accounts of the company in respect of its financial year ended 31/12/01. |
Vallis Vale Developments Limited (JALJJ1 pages 5-9) | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of an annual return for the year 2002. |
Vallis Vale Developments Limited | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of the accounts of the company in respect of its financial year ended 30/11/00. |
Vallis Vale Developments Limited | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of the accounts of the company in respect of its financial year ended 30/11/01. |
See More Business Limited (JALJJ1 pages 10-14) | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies a copy of an annual return for the year 2002. |
See More Business Limited . | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of the accounts of the company in respect of its financial year ended 30/11/00. |
See More Business Limited | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of the accounts of the company in respect of its financial year ended 30/11/01. |
Pacifico Software Consultancy Limited (JALJJ1 pages 15-18).. | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of an annual return for the year 2001. |
Pacifico Software Consultancy Limited | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of an annual return for the year 2002. |
On 29 Apri1.2003, after hearing evidence from Clare Purkiss, Cardiff Magistrates Court convicted Legal Directors of the offences alleged against it in respect of .the above companies (JALJJ1 pages 37-41).
10. Legal Directors, being a director of Sunquest Holidays Mallorca Limited, was summonsed to appear at Cardiff Magistrates Court on 22 May 2003 in respect of allegations made against it by the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry and summarised in the table below.
Company Name | Summary of Allegation |
Sunquest Holidays. Mallorca Limited (JALJJ1 pages 21-24) | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of the accounts of the company in respect of its financial year ended 31/07/00. |
Sunquest Holidays Mallorca Limited | Failed to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of the accounts: of the company in respect of its financial year ended 31/07/01. |
On 22 May 2003, after hearing evidence from John Sibbons, Cardiff Magistrates Court convicted Legal Directors of the offences alleged against it in respect of Sunquest Holidays Mallorca Limited (JALJJ1 pages 41-42).
11. Legal Directors was sentenced on 22 May 2003 in respect of the offences for which it was convicted on that day and on 29 April 2003. 4 prior convictions of Legal Directors, as summarised in the table below, were brought to the notice of the Court.
Company Name | Date of Conviction |
Offence |
Walkers of Banbury 2000 Limited (JALJJ1 pages 27-31) | 10/12/01. | Permitting, default to be made in forwarding to the Registrar of Companies House an Annual Return for the year 2001. |
Walkers of Banbury 2000 Limited | 10/12/01 | Failing to deliver to the. Registrar of Companies House a copy-of the accounts for the financial year 28/02/00 |
Walkers of Banbury 2000 Limited (JALJJ1 pages 32-36) | 25/02/03 | Continuing to fail to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of the accounts for the financial year 28/02/00 |
Walkers of Banbury 2000 Limited | 25/02/03 | Failing to deliver to the Registrar of Companies House a copy of the accounts for the financial year 28/0.2/0 |
12. Legal Directors was disqualified from being a director for a period of 3 years from 22 May 2003 pursuant to Sections 1 and 5 of the Company Directors' Disqualification Act 1986 in addition to being fined and ordered topay costs (JALJJ1 pages 37-45)."
"6. During its life as a company LDL was itself a director of numerous of different companies. In each case it played no active role in the management of the company of which it was a director but instead acted as a nominee. This service was provided through Anglo-Legal Limited (Anglo-Legal) and its associated companies, who provide company start up, accountancy, tax planning and other corporate services from offices in London and Liverpool. In return for LDL acting as a nominee corporate director of a given company, the beneficial owners of that company paid an annual fee to Anglo-Legal Limited and or its associated companies. The annual fee paid during the last year of LDL's life was £195. Since the dissolution of LDL, Anglo-Legal has continued to provide nominee director services through another associated company.
7. As part of the provision of LDL as a nominee director there was a clear understanding between Anglo-Legal and the relevant client (the beneficial owners of the company) that LDL would not undertake any active management of the company and that the client would be responsible among other things for keeping proper accounts, filing those accounts and filing annual returns in a timely manner. As part of its terms of business Anglo-Legal takes a contractual indemnity from its clients in respect of any cause of action arising from the provision of services by it or other members of the group. I attach hereto at pages 1 to 6 of JAHN 1 a copy of Anglo-Legal's current Terms & Conditions including the said indemnity at clause 16. I also attach at page 7 of JAHN 1 copy of a standard form Deed of Indemnity of a type that would have been signed in relation to Mercury. I accept that LDL cannot succeed in avoiding its responsibilities in this manner. LDL never sought to contend that it could. Clearly in these circumstances LDL is exposed to disqualification in circumstances where the client does not fulfil its duties in a responsible manner. In the event LDL was disqualified with effect from 22nd May 2003 as a direct result of the convictions identified by John Jones.
8. For the avoidance of any doubt, the service by which nominee corporate directors are provided to companies in return for a modest annual fee is a legitimate business provided by scores companies and other organisations in the UK, usually (as in the case of Anglo-Legal) ancillary to corporate start-up and off-the-shelf company set up services. Many of these are owned by some of the biggest UK international law and accountancy firms.
Mercury
9. LDL was a director of Mercury from 12 February 2001 to 9 June 2003. On 10 January 2003 Mr Tom Ahlmann was also appointed a director of Mercury. But I accept and rely upon the evidence contained in the affidavit of Mr Burns dated 21 June 2005 at paragraphs 9 to 11 which clearly shows that Mr Ahlmann and Mr Hall acted as directors of Mercury throughout its life. I attach at pages 8 to 15 of JAHN 1 copies of two Powers of Attorney executed by LDL in favour of Mr Hall and Mr Ahlmann enabling them to conduct Mercury's affairs. It was they who actively managed and operated Mercury. In keeping with its nominee role, LDL left the active management of Mercury to them.
10. 1myself played no active part whatsoever in the management of the affairs of Mercury. This is, of course, entirely appropriate given that Mercury is a company of which I am not now and never have been a director. I had no contact with Mr Ahlmann or Mr Hall who themselves undertook to actively manage the company without any reference to me and without informing me of any of Mercury's day to day affairs. I issued no instructions to them, I did not seek to influence their actions and at no time was I held out as a director of Mercury. No evidence has been adduced in proceedings to suggest otherwise. Anglo-Legal has provided this service for many years and has done so, so far as I am aware, without any claim of the sort now made by the Secretary of State. I confess to being somewhat mystified as to why I am being singled out at this particular point in time by the Secretary of State. The evidence of Mr Burns and Mr Jones provides no answer to this question."
"Duty of court to disqualify unfit directors of insolvent companies.
(1) The court shall make a disqualification order against a person in any case where, on an application under this section, it is satisfied—
(a) that he is or has been a director of a company which has at any time become insolvent (whether while he was a director or subsequently), and
(b) that his conduct as a director of that company (either taken alone or taken together with his conduct as a director of any other company or companies) makes him unfit to be concerned in the management of a company."
Does the Court have jurisdiction to disqualify Mr Nuttall?
"The judge observed, correctly, that complete inactivity by a director can constitute unfitness. That point has since been emphasised by this court in Re Westmid Packing Services Ltd, Secretary of State for Trade and Industry v Griffiths(No 3) [1998] 2 BCC 836,. Lord Woolf MR, giving the judgment of the court, said at page 842A:-
"Each individual director owes duties to the company to inform himself about its affairs and to join with his co-directors in supervising and controlling them. A proper degree of delegation and division of responsibility is of course permissible, and often necessary, but total abrogation of responsibility is not".
He said at p 843D:
"It is of the greatest importance that any individual who undertakes the statutory and fiduciary obligations of being a company director should realise that these are inescapable personal responsibilities. The appellants may have been dazzled, manipulated and deceived by [the moving spirit behind the misfeasance, who was disqualified for nine years] but they were in breach of their own duties in allowing this to happen."
It was Mr Solly's duty to inform himself about the affairs of the company (quite apart from the fact, which I disregard, that it was supposed to be an almost wholly-owned subsidiary of Holdings, of which Mr and Mrs Solly were undoubtedly directors). His honest but thoroughly unreasonable belief that he was not a director cannot in my judgment be a defence. The law should give no encouragement to the notion that if a man takes on so many directorships that he cannot remember them, he is thereby released from the heavy responsibility which he has undertaken."
In Official Receiver v Vass [1999] BCC 516 at page 524, Blackburne J said in a case on similar facts to the present but not involving corporate directors:-
"The fact that [the Respondent] has been willing, systematically and deliberately, to hold himself out as a director of so many companies, but on a nominee basis, abrogating his responsibility for those companies, is of itself, …an extremely serious matter deserving of a substantial period of disqualification."
"(4) "Director" includes any person occupying the position of director, by whatever name called
(5) "Shadow director", in relation to a company, means a person in accordance with whose directions or instructions the directors of the company are accustomed to act (but so that a person is not deemed a shadow director by reason only that the directors act on advice given by him in a professional capacity)."
Almost identical provisions appear in sec 741 of the Companies Act 1985 and sec 251 of the Insolvency Act 1986.
"Eagle Trust plc had a wholly-owned subsidiary, Midland City Partnerships Ltd (MCP), which in turn had a wholly-owned subsidiary, Landsaver MCP Ltd (Landsaver 19). Hydrodam (Corby) Ltd (the company) was a wholly-owned subsidiary of Landsaver 19. The company had two corporate directors. The company went into liquidation and the liquidator commenced proceedings against two of the directors of Eagle Trust plc alleging that they were liable under s 214 of the Insolvency Act 1986 as de facto or shadow directors in connection with the affairs of the company. The directors applied to have the liquidator's applications against them struck out. The applications by the directors were dismissed and the directors appealed."
"Directors may be of three kinds: de jure directors, that is to say, those who have been validly appointed to the office; de facto directors, that is to say, directors who assume to act as directors without having been appointed validly or at all; and shadow directors who are persons falling within the definition which I have read."
At page 183 he continues:-
"A de facto director is a person who assumes to act as a director. He is held out as a director by the company, and claims and purports to be a director, although never actually or validly appointed as such. To establish that a person was a de facto director of a company it is necessary to plead and prove that he undertook functions in relation to the company which could properly be discharged only by a director….
A de facto director, I repeat, is one who claims to act and purports to act as a director, although not validly appointed as such. A shadow director, by contrast, does not claim or purport to act as a director. On the contrary, he claims not to be a director. He lurks in the shadows, sheltering behind others who, he claims, are the only directors of the company to the exclusion of himself. He is not held out as a director by the company. To establish that a defendant is a shadow director of a company it is necessary to allege and prove: (1) who are the directors of the company, whether de facto or de jure; (2), that the defendant directed those directors how to act in relation to the company or that he was one of the persons who did so; (3) that those directors acted in accordance with such directions; and (4) that they were accustomed so to act. What is needed is first, a board of directors claiming and purporting to act as such; and secondly, a pattern of behaviour in which the board did not exercise any discretion or judgment of its own, but acted in accordance with the directions of others.
In the present case, there were titular directors of the company. They were Channel Island companies. That fact alone may be sufficient to justify an inference that they were accustomed to act in accordance with the directions of others; in which case there were shadow directors of the company. But there is nothing pleaded in the points of claim to suggest that there were, in addition to the titular directors, any other persons who claimed to be directors of the company at all.
Counsel have argued the case before me on the footing that sufficient facts are pleaded to justify the inference that Eagle Trust and possibly MCP as well, acted as a shadow director of the company. I shall assume that that is so. Against Dr Hardwick – I take him first as the simpler of the two – what is alleged is pleaded under the heading of 'The Respondents' Respective Involvement' and is contained in para 23 of the points of claim, as follows:
"
Dr Hardwick, as a director of Eagle Trust, is, with the other directors thereof, collectively responsible for the conduct of that company [i.e. Eagle Trust] ... in relation to the company."
It is therefore the liquidator's case that Eagle Trust was a director of the company (presumably a shadow director); and Dr Hardwick's liability is based exclusively upon the fact, being the only fact alleged against him, that he was one of the directors of Eagle Trust. As one of the directors of a shadow director, it is alleged, he was one of those collectively responsible for Eagle Trust's conduct; and was accordingly a shadow director of the company. In my judgment the conclusion does not follow from the premise.
The liquidator submitted that where a body corporate is a director of a company, whether it be a de jure, de facto or shadow director, its own directors must ipso facto be shadow directors of the company. In my judgment that simply does not follow. Attendance of board meetings and voting, with others, may in certain limited circumstances expose a director to personal liability to the company of which he is a director or its creditors. But it does not, without more, constitute him a director of any company of which his company is a director.
It is not alleged against Dr Hardwick that he did anything at all in relation to the affairs of the company, not even that he voted as a director of Eagle Trust in respect of any matter in relation to the affairs of the company.
In my judgment the mere fact that Dr Hardwick was a director of Eagle Trust does not establish that he was either a shadow director or a de facto director of the company. The expression 'collectively responsible' obscures the relevant legal relationship. By reason of his appointment as a director of Eagle Trust, Dr Hardwick owed fiduciary duties and a duty of care to Eagle Trust, but it does not follow that he ever gave instructions to the directors of the company or that the directors of the company were accustomed to act on his instructions. Nor does it follow that he ever acted as a director of the company.
It is possible (although it is not so alleged) that the directors of Eagle Trust as a collective body gave directions to the directors of the company and that the directors of the company were accustomed to act in accordance with such directions. But if they did give such directions as directors of Eagle Trust, acting as the board of Eagle Trust, they did so as agents for Eagle Trust (or more accurately as the appropriate organ of Eagle Trust) and the result is to constitute Eagle Trust, but not themselves, shadow directors of the company.
In practice, in a case of the present kind, it is much more likely that it will be found that the executive directors of the ultimate parent company (or some of them) have from time to time individually and personally given directions to the directors of the subsidiary and thereby rendered themselves personally liable as shadow directors of the subsidiary. But if all they have done is to act in their capacity as directors of the ultimate holding company, in passing resolutions at board meetings, then in my judgment the holding company is the shadow director of the subsidiary, and they are not."
" It will be seen that Judge Cooke reads Mr Lloyd as referring to equality of ability to participate in the notional board room.
For myself I think it may be difficult to postulate any one decisive test. I think what is involved is very much a question of degree. The court takes into account all the relevant factors. Those factors include at least whether or not there was a holding out by the company of the individual as a director, whether the individual used the title, whether the individual had proper information (e.g. management accounts) on which to base decisions, and whether the individual had to make major decisions and so on. Taking all these factors into account, one asks 'was this individual part of the corporate governing structure', answering it as a kind of jury question. In deciding this, one bears very much in mind why one is asking the question. That is why I think the passage I quoted from Millett J is important. There would be no justification for the law making a person liable to misfeasance or disqualification proceedings unless they were truly in a position to exercise the powers and discharge the functions of a director. Otherwise they would be made liable for events over which they had no real control, either in fact or law."
"I do not understand Jacob J, in the first part of that passage, to be enumerating tests which must all be satisfied if de facto directorship is to be established. He is simply drawing attention to some (but not all) of the relevant factors, recognising that the crucial issue is whether the individual in question has assumed the status and functions of a company director so as to make himself responsible under the 1986 Act as if he were a de jure director."
i) As I have already pointed out the purposes of section 6 of the CDDA and section 214 of the Insolvency Act must be similar, namely, the protection of the public from errant directors. The term "director" is similarly defined in both Acts; see section 22 CDDA and section 251 IA. There can therefore be no justification in giving that term a different construction for the purposes of section 6 than that which it was given in the Hydrodam case for the purposes of section 214.
ii) In the Hydrodam case, in the passage which I have set out above, Millett J finds that the director of a corporate director is not, without more, constituted a director, whether shadow or de facto of a subject company. However I do not read his judgment as saying that this can never happen. I can well accept that an individual through his control of a corporate director can constitute himself a de facto director of a subject company. It seems to me that whether or not he does so will depend on what that individual procures the corporate director to do. In theory I am not bound by the judgment of Millett J in the Hydrodam case. Even putting on one side the authority of that judge in this and other fields of the law, I would need convincing reasons for not following it. I can find none.
iii) It seems to me that in order to be constituted a de facto director of a subject company, a director of a corporate de jure director must cause the corporate director to take actions with relation to the subject company as would have constituted it a de facto director of that company were it not already a director de jure.
iv) In addition the degree of control which the director of the corporate director exercises over that company will be of relevance. In the present case Mr Nuttall's control was absolute but the situation may be substantially different where the corporate director is controlled by a board with a number of members with different responsibilities. Equally the shareholder control of the corporate director may be relevant.
v) In the present case Mr Nuttall has not, either individually, or through his control of LDL taken any step which indicated that either he or LDL had "assumed the status and functions" of a director of Mercury. They had positively declined to do so. It follows that Mr Nuttall, by contrast with LDL, was never subject to the duty to ensure that Mercury kept proper books of account, complying with section 221 of the Companies Act, or that the six companies made proper returns to the companies registry. As a de jure director LDL could be made subject to those duties.
vi) It seems to me that there is no true lacuna in the protection which the CDDA was intended by Parliament to give to the public. If the Secretary of State takes the view that corporate directorships are being abused by a single corporate director acquiring a mass of directorships of subject companies or by the parent company of a number of corporate directors achieving the same result, it is open to the Secretary of State to present a petition against a corporate director or its parent to wind it up under section 124A of the Insolvency Act 1986 on public interest grounds and thereafter, if appropriate, to apply to disqualify any directors of those corporate directors, or relevant parent companies, under section 8 of the CDDA.
For these reasons, in my judgment, the application to disqualify Mr Nuttall under section 6 of the CDDA fails for want of jurisdiction under that section.