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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 >> Atkinson v Corcoran & Ors [2011] EWHC 3484 (Ch) (21 December 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/3484.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 3484 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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PAUL ATKINSON (as Liquidator of Fleetlite Limited) |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) ETHNE CORCORAN (sued as: EXECUTRIX OF THE DECEASED ESTATE OF KIERON CORCORAN; BENEFICIARY OF THE DECEASED ESTATE OF KIERON CORCORAN; IN HER OWN CAPACITY.) (2) KIERON PAUL CORCORAN (3) JAYNE PARKER |
Respondents |
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Hearing dates: 13-14 December 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Bean :
The liquidator's claims
a) Fraudulent trading: In this claim it is alleged that fictitious invoices (i.e. invoices for services that had never been rendered) were raised by ACL on 9th June, 5th July and 8th December 2004 and by Mopark on 17th September 2004 and met (at least in part) by Fleetlite. These four invoices total £436,700 plus VAT. The liquidator also alleges that all sums paid out to ACL and Mopark constituted fraudulent trading: if that were so the total claim would be £679,687.71 plus VAT.
b) Unlawful means conspiracy: The liquidator relies on the same facts to claim damages for conspiracy to injure the company by unlawful means. The quantum of the claim is the same as that of the fraudulent trading claim.
c) Dishonest assistance: By way of a further alternative claim, the liquidator alleges that the Respondents (including Mrs Corcoran in her representative and personal capacities) are liable for dishonest assistance by Mr Corcoran senior, Mr Corcoran junior and Mrs Parker in each other's breach of fiduciary duty towards the company; and that all the Respondents are liable for dishonest assistance in the scheme relied on as giving rise to the fraudulent trading claim. Again the quantum is the same.
d) Wrongful trading: This claim, valued at £723,867 net of interest, is brought against Mrs Corcoran in her representative capacity (but not in her own right) and against Mr Corcoran junior and Mrs Parker, pursuant to section 214 of the Insolvency Act 1986. The liquidator claims that from 16th March 2004, alternatively from 1st December 2004, they knew or ought to have known that there was no reasonable prospect of the company avoiding insolvent liquidation.
e) Preferences: In this claim, also brought against the Respondents other than Mrs Corcoran in her own right, the allegation is that payments totalling £752,711 were made to connected companies or to members of the Corcoran family themselves.
f) Finally the liquidator alleges that the wrongful trading or preferential payments constituted acts of fraud, misfeasance and breach of fiduciary or other duties by the relevant Respondents.
Subsequent history: Fleetlite
Subsequent history relating to ACL
The ground of the application to strike out
Delay and fairness of the trial
"The law is that when an attempt is made to charge a dead person in a matter, in which if he were alive he might have answered the charge, the evidence ought to be looked at with great care; the evidence ought to be thoroughly sifted, and the mind of any judge who hears it ought to be, first of all, in a state of suspicion; but if in the end the truthfulness of the witnesses is made perfectly clear and apparent, and the tribunal which has to act on their evidence believes them, the suggested doctrine becomes absurd."
Pleading issues
49In my judgment a balance must be struck between the need for fair notice to be given on the one hand and excessive demands for detail on the other….
51……..[It] is clear that as a general rule, the more serious the allegation of misconduct, the greater is the need for particulars to be given which explain the basis for the allegation. This is especially so where the allegation that is being made is of bad faith or dishonesty. The point is well established by authority in the case of fraud.
183. The rules which govern both pleading and proving a case of fraud are very strict. In Jonesco v Beard [1930] AC 298 Lord Buckmaster, with whom the other members of the House concurred, said, at p 300:
"It has long been the settled practice of the court that the proper method of impeaching a completed judgment on the ground of fraud is by action in which, as in any other action based on fraud, the particulars of the fraud must be exactly given and the allegation established by the strict proof such a charge requires" [Lord Millett's emphasis].
184 It is well established that fraud or dishonesty must be distinctly alleged and as distinctly proved; that it must be sufficiently particularised; and that it is not sufficiently particularised if the facts pleaded are consistent with innocence: see Kerr on Fraud and Mistake, 7th ed (1952), p 644; Davy v Garrett (1878) 7 Ch D 473, 489; Bullivant v Attorney General for Victoria [1901] AC 196; Armitage v Nurse [1998] Ch 241, 256. This means that a plaintiff who alleges dishonesty must plead the facts, matters and circumstances relied on to show that the defendant was dishonest and not merely negligent, and that facts, matters and circumstances which are consistent with negligence do not do so.
185It is important to appreciate that there are two principles in play. The first is a matter of pleading. The function of pleadings is to give the party opposite sufficient notice of the case which is being made against him. If the pleader means "dishonestly" or "fraudulently", it may not be enough to say "wilfully" or "recklessly". Such language is equivocal. A similar requirement applies, in my opinion, in a case like the present, but the requirement is satisfied by the present pleadings. It is perfectly clear that the depositors are alleging an intentional tort.
186The second principle, which is quite distinct, is that an allegation of fraud or dishonesty must be sufficiently particularised, and that particulars of facts which are consistent with honesty are not sufficient. This is only partly a matter of pleading. It is also a matter of substance. As I have said, the defendant is entitled to know the case he has to meet. But since dishonesty is usually a matter of inference from primary facts, this involves knowing not only that he is alleged to have acted dishonestly, but also the primary facts which will be relied upon at trial to justify the inference. At trial the court will not normally allow proof of primary facts which have not been pleaded, and will not do so in a case of fraud. It is not open to the court to infer dishonesty from facts which have not been pleaded, or from facts which have been pleaded but are consistent with honesty. There must be some fact which tilts the balance and justifies an inference of dishonesty, and this fact must be both pleaded and proved."