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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 >> Stanley International Betting Ltd v Stanleybet UK Investments Ltd & Ors [2011] EWHC 1732 (Ch) (12 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/1732.html Cite as: [2012] BCLC 1, [2011] EWHC 1732 (Ch), [2011] BCC 691, [2012] 1 BCLC 1 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT)
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Stanley International Betting Limited |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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1. Stanleybet UK Investments Limited 2. L Sports Investments Limited 3. The Honourable Jonathan Steinberg 4. The Honourable Lynne Attias (the 3rd and 4th Respondents as the personal representatives of the estate of Lord Steinberg of Belfast (deceased) |
Respondents |
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Ms Lexa Hilliard QC and Ms Tina Kyriakides (instructed by Davis Arnold Cooper) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 24 June 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Stuart Isaacs QC:
Introduction
Background
Costs of the injunction application
The application for an administration order
Who should be the administrators?
(1) The Estate is SUKI's largest creditor.
(2) SIB's conduct in managing STS' business pursuant to the services agreement requires investigation. STS' value has decreased dramatically since STS was acquired and it has recently been discovered that SIB has used its management position to procure for itself substantial contracts for the supply of products and services.
(3) PKF has, or appears to have, aligned itself too closely with SIB's interests in that (a) it proposes to maintain SIB's position in STS during the course of the administration, (b) will thereby have to rely on information provided by SIB in circumstances where SIB has not been forthcoming in the provision of information to the Estate, (c) has aligned itself with SIB's "tactic" to procure that it is appointed as administrator of SOI prior to the present hearing; (d) is proposing to act as brokers in the shareholders' dispute; and (e) has instructed the same solicitors as SIB.
(1) The test in relation to the appointment of a liquidator is whether it will be conducive to both the proper operation of the process of liquidation an to justice as between all those interested in the liquidation.
(2) Although the majority vote of the creditors will in the normal course prevail, creditors holding the majority vote do not have an absolute right to the choice of liquidator.
(3) A liquidator should not be a person nor be the choice of a person who has a duty or purpose which conflicts with the duties of the liquidator. He should in particular not be the nominee of a person against whom the company has hostile or conflicting claims or whose conduct in relation to the affairs of the company is under investigation.
(4) By contrast, it is not an objection to a liquidator that he is allied to or the choice of a person who is concerned to pursue the claims of the company through the liquidator.
"There are a number of aspects here which require serious investigation. The creditors must have confidence that they will be investigated with appropriate vigour. If the only concern was a commercial issue then the views of the majority of creditors in value would have to prevail. Where there is a question of the need for investigations to be carried out with due vigour, there is a public interest issue in ensuring that the investigations take place properly. In my judgment the principles set out by His Honour Judge Maddocks apply to administration and Mr Andonikou's reliance on Mr Farhi and his continued confidence in him even when he discovered he had not been given the full picture means that creditors cannot be satisfied that Mr Andronikou would deal with this matter appropriately."
"Fairness and commercial morality may require that a substantial independent creditor, which feels itself to have been prejudiced by what it regards as sharp practice, should be able to insist on the company's affairs being scrutinised by the process which follows a compulsory order. Such a creditor is entitled to an investigation which is not only independent, but can be seen to be independent. This may be so even where the voluntary liquidation is already well advanced and a compulsory order may cause further expense and delay ."
And also the passage at 270A-C that:
"the fact that the associated creditors have gone to such lengths to install and maintain Mr Moses in office is itself enough to disqualify him in the eyes of Rainbow [the landlord]; and in view of all that has happened Rainbow's attitude cannot be dismissed as irrational. Nor can it be characterised as a 'witch hunt'; the matters that call for investigation will be investigated impartially, on behalf of the general body or creditors, during the process of compulsory liquidation."