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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 >> St Paul Travelers Insurance Company Ltd v Dargan & Anor [2006] EWHC 3189 (Ch) (15 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/3189.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 3189 (Ch), [2007] Lloyd's Rep IR 742 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
IN THE MATTER OF BALLAST PLC
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
____________________
ST PAUL TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED | Applicant | |
and | ||
NICHOLAS JAMES DARGAN AND NICHOLAS GUY EDWARDS | ||
(As Joint Liquidators of Ballast Plc) | First Respondents | |
MOTT MACDONALD LIMITED | ||
Second Respondent |
____________________
Mr Richard Hill (instructed by Fishburns) for the Second Respondent
Hearing: October 23, 2006
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lawrence Collins:
I Introduction
II Background
"Whether your client chooses to pursue option 1 is a decision for them and St Paul hereby reserves its position as regards the validity of any purported disclaimer of Ballast's right of action against Mott MacDonald. In the circumstances, we feel sure that you will understand that unless your client serves a notice of disclaimer upon St Paul in respect of Ballast's right of action by 4pm on Thursday 9 February 2006, St Paul will be left with no option but to issue proceedings against Ballast asking the Court that Ballast lend its name to the proceedings against Mott MacDonald. We attach, for your information, a copy of our client's draft particulars of Claim dealing with both the application for use of Ballast's name and the detailed claims against Mott MacDonald in relation to the failed slope.
In the event that your client serves such a notice of disclaimer, St Paul intends, without prejudice to the question of the validity of the purported disclaimer, to apply to the court for an order that the right of action vest in it.
Additionally, on the basis of your client's apparent view that the right of action is property of Ballast capable of disclaimer, the only consistent approach would therefore be to conclude that Mott MacDonald's claims in the liquidation of Ballast have been extinguished by virtue of Rule 4.90 and its proof of debt should accordingly be rejected. Please confirm by return that this is in fact your client's position. Further, we repeat our contention expressed in our letter dated 28 November 2005 that any steps taken by your client in respect of Mott MacDonald's claims to the detriment of St Paul's subrogated claim would constitute a breach of your client's fiduciary duty."
"In view of the above, your claim may change and cannot be agreed as a certain claim. Pursuant to Rule 4.82 Insolvency Rules 1986 we can confirm, solely for the purposes of a dividend distribution (and for no other purposes), that we will admit your claim for an amount of £400,000. If you are dissatisfied with this decision you may apply to court for the decision to be reversed or varied. Any application by you must be made within 21 days of receiving this letter."
"…all of the Company's interest in any claim Ballast Plc may have against [MMD] pursuant to the Appointment Agreement executed 26 October 2001 between Ballast Plc and Mott McDonald Limited for breach of contract in relation to the slope failures on the Development (as defined in the Appointment Agreement) and all other matters set out in the letter of claim from Pinsent Masons solicitors to Fishburns solicitors dated 8 March 2004."
"… the Liquidators accept the sum of £533,000 is due from Ballast Plc in respect of unpaid fees to Mott MacDonald, and admit Mott MacDonald's claim for a dividend to that extent.
The Liquidators acknowledge that Mott MacDonald also claims a further amount of £212,083.64 in respect of fees claimed in Invoice Nos. IN00002798, IN00011487, IN00015707, and IN00027037 and agree that the Liquidators' admission to a dividend of the lesser amount of £533,000 is without prejudice to Mott MacDonald's entitlement to assert that the amount of the £745,083.64 is owing from the company to Mott MacDonald.
If you are dissatisfied with this decision you may apply to court for the decision to be reversed or varied. Any application by you must be made within 21 days of receiving this letter."
III Disclaimer
A The relevant interest
St Paul
MMD
B Utility
MMD
St Paul
C Limitation if any vesting order is made
MMD
St Paul
IV Proposed amendment: whether vesting order is necessary
V Conclusions
"(2) Subject as follows, the liquidator may, by the giving of the prescribed notice, disclaim any onerous property and may do so notwithstanding that he has taken possession of it, endeavoured to sell it, or otherwise exercised rights of ownership in relation to it.
(3) The following is onerous property for the purposes of this section -
(a) any unprofitable contract, and
(b) any other property of the company which is unsaleable or not readily saleable or is such that it may give rise to a liability to pay money or perform any other onerous act.
(4) A disclaimer under this section -
(a) operates so as to determine, as from the date of the disclaimer, the rights, interests and liabilities of the company in or in respect of the property disclaimed; but
(b) does not, except so far as is necessary for the purpose of releasing the company from any liability, affect the rights or liabilities of any other person."
"… the statute takes effect as a deeming provision so far as other persons' preserved rights and obligations are concerned. A deeming provision is a commonplace statutory technique. The statute provides that a disclaimer operates to determine the interest of the tenant in the disclaimed property but not so as to affect the rights or liabilities of any other person. Thus when the lease is disclaimed it is determined and the reversion accelerated but the rights and liabilities of others, such as guarantors and original tenants, are to remain as though the lease had continued and not been determined. In this way the determination of the lease is not permitted to affect the rights or liabilities of other persons. Statute has so provided.
The vesting order provisions do not run counter to this analysis. If a vesting order is made, the court order operates by virtue of the statute to vest the lease in the person named on the terms fixed by the court. That the lease may have ceased to exist meanwhile is neither here nor there. If necessary, there will be a statutory recreation.
If no vesting order is made and the landlord takes possession, the liabilities of other persons to pay the rent and perform the tenant's covenants will come to an end as far as the future is concerned. If the landlord acts in this way, he is no longer merely the involuntary recipient of a disclaimed lease. By his own act of taking possession he has demonstrated that he regards the lease as ended for all purposes. His conduct is inconsistent with there being a continuing liability on others to perform the tenant covenants in the lease. He cannot have possession of the property and, at the same time, claim rent for the property from others.
… It must be recognised, however, that awkwardness is inherent in the statutory operation: extinguishing ('determining') the lease so far as the bankrupt is concerned, but leaving others' rights and liabilities in respect of the same lease affected no more than necessary to achieve the primary purpose.
… The tenant's interest in the property is determined, but not so as to affect the interest of the subtenant. Determination of the subtenant's interest in the property is not necessary to free the tenant from liability. Hence the subtenant's interest continues. No deeming is necessary to produce this result. Here the deeming relates to the terms on which the subtenant's proprietary interest continues. His interest continues unaffected by the determination of the tenant's interest. Accordingly the subtenant holds his estate on the same terms, and subject to the same rights and obligations, as would be applicable if the tenant's interest had continued. If he pays the rent and performs the tenant covenants in the disclaimed lease, the landlord cannot eject him. If he does not, the landlord can distrain upon his goods for the rent reserved by the disclaimed lease or bring forfeiture proceedings. In practice, matters are likely to be brought to a head by one of the parties making an application for a vesting order."
"The term 'interest' is not … confined to a proprietary interest. It extends to any financial interest in the subsistence or otherwise of the lease and includes, in particular, any interest that would be adversely affected by the disclaimer."
"It seems to me that nothing that was said by Mr Lightman in Re Vedmay Ltd can be read as requiring this or any other court, to take notice of any such interest as does not constitute an interest in the property. To read the section more widely would lead to absurd results which cannot have been intended by the legislature … [T]his court cannot have any prospect of according to [the applicant] any such interest or recognising any such interest as it would be necessary for him to claim, if he was to bring himself within the provisions of s. 181."
"In normal cases, as for example under contracts of insurance, the insurer will on payment request the assured to sign a letter of subrogation, authorising the insurer to proceed in the name of the assured against any wrongdoer who has caused the relevant damage to the assured. If the assured refuses to give such authority, in theory the insurer can bring proceedings to compel him to do so. But nowadays the insurer can short-circuit this cumbrous process by bringing an action against both the assured and the third party, in which (1) he claims an order that the assured shall authorise him to proceed against the third party in the name of the assured, and (2) he seeks to proceed (so authorised) against the third party. But it must not be thought that, because this convenient method of proceeding now exists, the insurer can without more proceed in his own name against the third party. He has no right to do so, so long as the right of action he is seeking to enforce is the right of action of the assured. Only if that right of action is assigned to him by the assured can he proceed directly against the third party in his own name …"
"I do not think that the proprietary interest in the damages necessarily postulates a pre-existing proprietary interest in the cause of action. The contrary view could be reached by an argument along the following lines. Any equitable proprietary right must be based on the contract between the insurers and the assured. The implied terms of such contract are established by the decided authorities. Some of those implied terms may be inconsistent with the insurers having any right of property in the cause of action as opposed to the damages recovered. Thus, the third party can compromise the claim with the assured alone, without requiring the concurrence of the insurers. Again, the third party will obtain a good discharge for a judgment only if he pays the assured as opposed to the insurers. If the insurers have a proprietary interest in the cause of action it could be argued that the assured alone could neither effect a valid compromise nor give a good discharge: the insurers also would have to be parties. Accordingly, it could be said that the implied terms of the contract between the insurers and the assured are such that equity would not be specifically enforcing the parties' bargain if it treated the insurers as having proprietary rights in the cause of action inconsistent with the rights of the assured and that accordingly the rights of the insurers are purely personal rights to require the assured either to pursue the cause of action against the third party or to permit the insurers to do so in his name. But there are plainly factors pointing the other way and since the question was not fully argued I prefer to express no view on the point." (752-753)
"It has long been the law, where insurers have paid a claim, that they stand in the shoes of the assured in order to recover anything which is relevant to that claim. The law has long been that subrogation entitles the insurers to bring an action in the name of the assured against the wrongdoer to recover anything that is recoverable. The reason for that is that the right of action is vested in the assured. The cases show that an action can be brought by the insurer in its own name where it has taken a legal assignment of the cause of action from the assured. That has not been done in the present case. Thus the insurers were entitled to instruct solicitors to bring this action in the name of their assured as long as the assured existed, but in March of 1985 the assured ceased to exist when the company was dissolved. There was no company in whose name any action could be started. In my judgment that has nothing to do with the right of subrogation. It is a straightforward statement that a non-existent party cannot be a party to an action." ([1986] BCLC 342, 343-344 per O'Connor LJ)
"But the right of subrogation does not have the effect of transferring to the insurers any cause of action which the assured may have against the wrongdoer. Such transfer can only be effected by a legal assignment to the insurers ….Alternatively, if the insurer encounters difficulty in persuading the assured to bring the action in respect of the claim for which he has indemnified him, or if he refuses to allow his name to be used, then he can join him in the action in order to compel him to do so, in the same way as the holder of an equitable assignment can bring an action against the debtor or wrongdoer by joining the assignor. If the assignor or, as in this case, the assured is no longer in existence, because the company has been dissolved then unfortunately for the insurer none of those things can be done by him, since he himself has no cause of action against the wrongdoer. All that he can do … is to apply to have the company restored to the register."
"It is true that if called upon to do so the assured is obliged to sue or to allow the insurance company to sue in respect of the particular loss that they have paid, and if the assured recovers it he is obliged to hand that sum over to the insurance company because it is impressed with a trust on their behalf; but putting that trust at its highest I am unable to understand how it can be said that the cestui que trust, that is the insurance company, by taking a particular course, which is not warranted by any independent contract, and by disclaiming their own right as a cestui que trust, can impose upon the assured as another cestui que trust the very person from whom at common law he is entitled to recover as damages that which is said to be the subject of the trust. I do not think there is any such thing as a cestui que trust imposing against the will of the trustee some other cestui que trust as a substitute for himself, and I am quite sure there is no such thing as a cestui que trust not merely able to substitute somebody else against the will of the trustee, but being able to substitute such person on the terms of a different trust."(per Sir Boyd Merriman P at 366)
"My view is that there is no right whatever in an insurer to dictate to his assured whether he shall or shall not abstain from enforcing his remedies against a third party which go in diminution of the loss against which the policy is issued; they have an absolute right to require him to enforce his remedies, but, in my opinion, they have no right to prevent him enforcing them. Their right is a right purely consequential on the nature of the contract of indemnity, and it arises because of it being a contract of indemnity and nothing more. If the assured by some process of recovery, whether by an action at law or by an ex gratia payment, obtains a payment in diminution of the loss, the underwriters or the insurers are entitled to the excess over the amount paid by them to him by way of strict indemnity, and no more. To my mind that is the remedy of the insurers, and that is the only remedy they have in respect of the assured's rights of recovery at common law." ...369)
"The defendant has given up this right of action against Jones, so that the plaintiffs can never recover that amount, and the course taken by the defendant has damaged the plaintiffs to that extent." ...per Lord Esher MR at 230)