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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 >> Kelly & Anor v Inflexion Fund 2 Ltd & Anor [2010] EWHC 2850 (Ch) (11 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/2850.html Cite as: [2011] BCC 93, [2010] EWHC 2850 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Leeds Combined Court Centre The Courthouse, 1, Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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IN THE MATTER OF PAL SC REALISATIONS 2007 LIMITED (In Liquidation) AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 ROBERT HUNTER KELLY and JONATHAN PETER SUMPTON (Liquidators of PAL SC Realisations 2007 Limited) |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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(1) INFLEXION FUND 2 LIMITED P ARTNERSHIP (2) AUTOCRUISE CO-INVESTMENT LIMITED PARTNERSHIP |
Respondents |
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Mr Mark Arnold instructed by Eversheds for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 7 October 2010
Hand down Judgment: 11 November 2010
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
Judge Kaye QC:
Introduction
Narrative
The Relevant Law
"(1) [Application of section] This section applies where a floating charge relates to property of a company—
(a) which has gone into liquidation,
(b) which is in administration,
(c) of which there is a provisional liquidator, or
(d) of which there is a receiver.
(2) [Prescribed part for unsecured debts] The liquidator, administrator or receiver—
(a) shall make a prescribed part of the company's net property available for the satisfaction of unsecured debts, and
(b) shall not distribute that part to the proprietor of a floating charge except in so far as it exceeds the amount required for the satisfaction of unsecured debts.
(3) [Non-application of s.176A(2)] Subsection (2) shall not apply to a company if—
(a) the company's net property is less than the prescribed minimum, and
(b) the liquidator, administrator or receiver thinks that the cost of making a distribution to unsecured creditors would be disproportionate to the benefits.
(4) ….
(5) [Non-application by court order] Subsection (2) shall also not apply to a company if—
(a) the liquidator, administrator or receiver applies to the court for an order under this subsection on the ground that the cost of making a distribution to unsecured creditors would be disproportionate to the benefits, and
(b) the court orders that subsection (2) shall not apply.
(6) [Net property in s.176A(2),(3)] In subsections (2) and (3) a company's net property is the amount of its property which would, but for this section, be available for satisfaction of claims of holders of debentures secured by, or holders of, any floating charge created by the company.
(7) ….
(8) ....
(9) ["Floating charge", "prescribed"] In this section—
(a) "floating charge" means a charge which is a floating charge on its creation and which is created after the first order under subsection (2)(a) comes into force, and
(b) "prescribed" means prescribed by order by the Secretary of State."
- A floating charge holder was barred from participating in the distribution of the prescribed part for the shortfall in its security because it was a proprietor of a floating charge for the purposes of s 176A(2)(b) (Permacell)
- Neither a fixed charge holder nor a floating charge holder was entitled to participate in any such distribution because its debts were not "unsecured debts" for the purposes of s 176A(2)(a) (Airbase).
- Thus s 248(1) Insolvency Act 1986 provides so far as relevant
"(a) "secured creditor", in relation to a company, means a creditor of the company who holds in respect of his debt a security over property of the company, and "unsecured creditor" is to be read accordingly".
- Rule 13.12(1) Insolvency Rules 1986 defines "Debt" in relation to the winding up of a company as "any of the following-
(a) any debt or liability to which the company is subject
(i) in the case of a winding up which was not immediately preceded by an administration, at the date on which the company went into liquidation;
(ii) in the case of a winding up which was immediately preceded by an administration, at the date on which the company entered administration.
(b) any debt or liability to which the company may become subject after that date by reason of any obligation incurred before that date; and
(c) any interest provable as mentioned in Rule 4.93(1)".
The Rival Contentions
- Those cases (Permacell and Airbase) are entirely different from the present: Those cases concerned the question of whether the secured creditor could, in respect of its unsecured shortfall, share in the prescribed part in circumstances where the secured creditor had, in each case, already received amounts by way of distribution under their security upon which they continued to rely.
- By contrast, this case concerned not a shortfall at all but a situation where the secured creditor (the Trustee and the respondents)
- Had received nothing in respect of their security,
- Had surrendered and released the entirety of their security (albeit worthless),
- Had by so surrendering, converted their status to that of unsecured creditor.
- No other decided case directly assists but there is nothing in the wording of s 176A or policy to exclude the respondents from sharing in the prescribed part in these circumstances.
- in order to determine whether or not the respondents are entitled to share in the prescribed part the court must ask itself a subsidiary question: what is the relevant time for determining the answer to that question? Is it
- The time when the floating charge assets were realised and the fund placed aside under s 176A(2)?
- The time when the company went into administration (which has for the sake of shorthand been referred to as the liquidation cut-off date): see rule 13.12 Insolvency Rules 1986 (as amended)?
- The time when the funds came to be distributed?
- If the first or second time was correct, then the respondents were not entitled to share in the prescribed part. If the third, then Mr Arden conceded that they were.
- In determining the correct time it is legitimate, argues Mr Arden, to have regard to the legislative purpose or policy of s 176A which is to set aside a fund for a defined class of creditors, namely unsecured creditors, the latter not including a debt secured in whole or in part by a floating charge. As HH Judge Purle QC put it in Permacell "The prohibition on distributing the prescribed part to a floating charge holder is in my judgment absolute." (para. 22). Patten J thought in Airbase that this prohibition also applied to a fixed charge holder. To enable a charge holder (fixed or floating) to release its security and then claim the prescribed part would defeat the legislative purpose of excluding such creditors from the prescribed part. Thus the correct time to pose the question must be at the liquidation cut-off date (see above) or the time when the assets are appropriated to meet the claims of unsecured creditors. If the later (distribution) time is taken the legislative policy is defeated.
- That the earlier time is correct is also consistent with the general rule applicable in the application of the statutory scheme on insolvency, namely that debts or liabilities provable in the liquidation are determined as at the date of the commencement of the winding up subject only to a few recognised exceptions such as contingent debts or debts ceasing to exist after commencement of the liquidation
Discussion
"I have long thought, and believe some of your Lordships also think, that the ordinary trade creditors of a trading company ought to have a preferential claim on the assets in liquidation in respect of debts incurred within a certain limited time before the winding up."
"In bankruptcy, if a secured creditor wants to prove, he must do one of three things: he may give up his security altogether and prove for the full amount, or he may get his security valued and prove for the difference, or he may sell and realize his security and then prove for the difference. If, without doing either of the latter two things, he proves for the full amount, as he cannot prove for the full amount and receive a dividend except on the theory of giving up the security, he shews by that an intention to give up his security; and, if he so proves and receives a dividend or votes, he shews pretty conclusively that he has finally elected to give up his security and take his dividend; in other words, having two funds to resort to, the bankrupt's general estate, so as to get a dividend on the whole amount of his debt, or his security, he elects to take the bankrupt's estate, and in that way gives up his security. It is not forfeiture, it is election; but, the petitioning creditor gets nothing unless he proves."
"If a secured creditor voluntarily surrenders his security for the general benefit of creditors, he may prove for his whole debt, as if it were unsecured."
"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 the 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.
33 It therefore seems to their Lordships that the principle of pari passu distribution according to the values of debts at the date of winding up does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that someone who was a creditor at that date must be allowed to participate in the distribution even when he is no longer a creditor at all. There is nothing unfair, or contrary to principle, in a rule which requires that anyone who claims to participate in a distribution should have the status of a creditor at the time when he makes that claim. It would be strange if the court can have regard to subsequent events in valuing a creditor's contingent claim at much less than it would have been thought to be worth at the date of the order but not to the fact that someone has ceased to be a creditor at all."
Conclusion