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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 >> Gleave & Ors v The Board of the Pension Protection Fund [2008] EWHC 1099 (Ch) (21 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/1099.html Cite as: [2008] Bus LR 1443, [2008] EWHC 1099 (Ch) |
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41,42,44,45,46, and 5926 of 2001 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF FEDERAL-MOGUL AFTERMARKET UK LIMITED and others AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 (1) JAMES JOHN GLEAVE (2) ANNE O'KEEFE (3) STUART MACKELLAR (as supervisors of the company voluntary arrangements of the above-named companies) |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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THE BOARD OF THE PENSION PROTECTION FUND |
Respondents |
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Michael Tennet QC, Lucy Frazer & Jonathan Hilliard (instructed by Dundas & Wilson LLP) for the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice David Richards:
"(1) If, in the case of an occupational pensions scheme which is not a money purchase scheme, the value at the applicable time of the assets of the scheme is less than the amount at that time of the liabilities of the scheme, an amount equal to the difference shall be treated as a debt due from the employer to the trustees or managers of the scheme.
(2) If in the case of an occupational pension scheme which is not a money purchase scheme -
(a) a relevant insolvency event occurs in relation to the employer, and
(b) a debt due from the employer under subsection (1) has not been discharged at the time that event occurs,
the debt in question shall be taken, for the purposes of the law relating to winding up, bankruptcy or sequestration as it applies in relation to the employer, to arise immediately before that time.
……
(5) For the purposes of sub-section (1), the liabilities and assets to be taken into account, and their amount or value, must be determined, calculated and verified by a prescribed person and in the prescribed manner.
…….
(10) Regulations may modify this section as at applies in prescribed circumstances."
"In the case of a scheme in relation to which there is more than one employer, the amount of the debt due from each employer shall, unless the scheme provides for the total amount of the debt due under subsection (1) to be otherwise apportioned amongst the employers, be such proportion of the total amount as, in the opinion of the actuary after consultation with the trustees or managers, the amount of the schemes liabilities attributable to employment with that that employers bears to the total amount of the scheme's liabilities attributable to employment with any of the employers."
"(3) In this section "the applicable time" means –
(a) in relation to a scheme which is being wound up, any time –
(i) after the commencement of the winding up, and
(ii) before a relevant solvency event has occurred in relation to each of the employers whom the scheme relates; and
(b) in relation to a scheme which is not being wound up –
(i) in relation only to any employer who ceases to be a person employing persons in the description or category of employment to which the scheme relates at a time when at least one other person continues to employ such persons, immediately before he so ceases, and
(ii) in relation only to any employer in relation to whom a relevant insolvency event occurs, immediately before the event occurs."
Reg 4(5) provides as follows:
"(5) For the purpose of section 75(1A) (as inserted by paragraph (2))
(a) the total amount of the scheme's liabilities which are attributable to employment with any one of the employers; and
(b) The amount of the liabilities attributable to employment with any one employer,
shall be such amount as is determined, calculated and verified by the actuary in accordance with the guidance given in GN19: and a determination under this paragraph must be certified by the actuary as being in accordance with that guidance."
"(1) The liabilities and assets of a scheme which are to be taken into account for the purposes of section 75(1) and their amount or value shall be determined, calculated and verified by the actuary –
a. on the general assumptions specified in paragraphs (2) and (3) of regulation 3 of the MFR Regulations;
b. subject to paragraphs (3) and (4), in accordance with regulations 4 to 8 of regulation 3 of the MFR Regulations;
c. subject to sub-paragraph (d), in so far as he guidance in GN27 applies as respect regulations 3(2) and (3) and 4 to 8 of the MFR Regulations, in accordance with that guidance; and
d. in accordance with the guidance given in GN19 so far as that guidance applies for the purpose of the Regulations;
and where in these Regulations (or in the MFR Regulations) there is a reference to the value of any asset or the amount of any liability being calculated or verified in accordance with the opinion of the actuary or as he thinks appropriate, he shall comply with any relevant provision in the guidance in GN27 or, as the case may be, GN19 in making that calculation or verification.
(2) The value of the assets and the amount of the liabilities of a scheme which are to be taken into account for the purpose of section 75(1) must be certified by the actuary in the form set out in Schedule 1 to these Regulations…"
"The Supervisors will review and evaluate Notices of Claim. They may request that the holder of a Non-Asbestos Claim submit further details or evidence in support of the claim. After the review and evaluation is complete, the Supervisors will either allow the Non-Asbestos Claim in whole or in part or reject it in whole or in part. If the Non-Asbestos Claim is not for a fixed amount, the Supervisors may also estimate the amount of the claim and allow the claim in the estimated amount."
""Claim" means any right to payment or satisfaction of a debt or liability existing as at the Filing Date, whether the right, debt or liability is present or future, certain or contingent, fixed or liquidated, ascertained or unascertained, and regardless of whether any such right, debt or liability is provable in a solvent or insolvent winding-up or other insolvency process. For the avoidance of doubt:
a) any right to payment or satisfaction of a debt or liability includes any right to payment or satisfaction of a debt or liability to pay money or money's worth under any enactment, statute or regulation, any debt or liability for breach of trust, any debt or liability in contract, tort or bailment, and any debt or liability arising out of an obligation to make restitution."
The "Filing Date" is defined as 1 October 2001. Paragraphs 8.3 – 8.6 provide for the submission of notices of claim and the allowance procedure as summarised in the extract from the explanatory statement cited above. Paragraph 9.2.3 provides that subject to the caps on Section 75 Claims against the fourteen companies, such claims were to be subject to the allowance procedures set out in paragraph 8.
"29 The image of collecting and uno flatu distributing assets of the company on the day of the winding up order is a vivid one, but the courts apply it to give effect to the underlying purpose of fair distribution between creditors pari passu and not as a rigid rule. Section 136(a) of the Companies Law (2002 rev) provides that "the property of the company shall be applied in satisfaction of its liabilities pari passu . . ." The principle of valuation at the date of winding up ensures that distribution among creditors is truly pari passu. It would, however, be pure conceptualism to apply it so as to require payment of a dividend to someone who, at the time of the distribution, is not a creditor at all.
30 So, for example, a policy of insurance on the life of a person living at the date of the order winding up the insurance company is a contingent debt which will be ordinarily valued in accordance with mortality tables as at the date of the winding up. As Lord Westbury said in In re European Assurance Society Arbitration (Allberg's Case) (1872) 17SJ 69, 70:
"you could not withhold out of the assets of the company a large sum of money, and keep it invested . . . to answer the claims when they arise. You must have a present value put on these future claims . . ."
31 On the other hand, if the life drops during the course of the winding up, the claim at the date of winding up will be revalued on the assumption that it was known at that date that the person insured would die when he did. If all the assets have been distributed, this will not help the beneficiaries because previous distributions cannot be set aside. But if there are still assets to be distributed, the beneficiaries will participate on the basis of the new valuation. Similarly in In re Northern Counties of England Fire Insurance Co (1880) 17 Ch D 337, the premises of an insured under a fire policy with an insolvent company were burned down during the course of the winding up. He was held entitled to prove for the full loss, that being (with hindsight) the value which would have been attributed at the date of winding up to his contingent claim under the policy if it had been known that his premises would burn down.
32 These cases on the use of hindsight to value debts which were contingent at the date of the winding up order show that the scene does not freeze at the date of winding up order. Adjustments are made to give effect to the underlying principle of pari passu distribution between creditors. Hindsight is used because it is not considered fair to a creditor to value a contingent debt at what it might have been worth at the date of the winding up order when one now knows that prescience would have shown it to be worth more. The same must be true of a contingent debt which prescience would have shown to be worth less."
"How does the law deal with the conundrum of having to set off, as of the bankruptcy date, "sums due" which may not yet be due or which may become owing upon contingencies which have not yet occurred? It employs two techniques. The first is to take into account everything which has actually happened between the bankruptcy date and the moment when it becomes necessary to ascertain what, on that date, was the state of account between the creditor and the bankrupt. If by that time the contingency has occurred and the claim has been quantified, then that is the amount which is treated as having been due at the bankruptcy date. An example is Sovereign Life Assurance Co v. Dodd [1892] 2 QB 573, in which the insurance company had lent Mr. Dodd £1,170 on the security of his policies. The company was wound up before the policies had matured but Mr Dodd went on paying the premiums until they became payable. The Court of Appeal held that the account required by bankruptcy set-off should set off the full matured value of the policies against the loan."
"…to take into account everything which has actually happened between the bankruptcy date and the moment when it becomes necessary to ascertain what, on that date, was the state of account between the creditor and the bankrupt. If by that time the contingency has occurred and the claim has been quantified, then that is the amount which is treated as having been due at the bankruptcy date." (emphasis added)
Likewise, in Wight v. Eckhardt Marine GmbH Lord Hoffmann said at para 32:
"Hindsight is used because it is not considered fair to a creditor to value a contingent debt at what it might have been worth at the date of the winding up order when one now knows that prescience would have shown it to be worth more."