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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 >> The Official Receiver v Going [2011] EWHC 786 (Ch) (16 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/786.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 786 (Ch), [2011] BPIR 1069 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
The Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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THE OFFICIAL RECEIVER | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
GOING | Defendant |
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165 Fleet Street, 8th Floor, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7422 6131 Fax No: 020 7422 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Wednesday, 16th February, 2011
HH Judge Pelling QC:
Introduction
The Statutory Framework
2(1) The court shall grant an application for a bankruptcy restrictions order if it thinks it appropriate having regard to the conduct of the bankrupt (whether before or after the making of the bankruptcy order).
(2) The court shall, in particular, take into account any of the following kinds of behaviour on the part of the bankrupt…
(d) giving a preference…
4(1) A bankruptcy restrictions order—
(a) shall come into force when it is made, and
(b) shall cease to have effect at the end of a date specified in the order.
(2) The date specified in a bankruptcy restrictions order under sub-paragraph (1)(b) must not be—
(a) before the end of the period of two years beginning with the date on which the order is made, or
(b) after the end of the period of 15 years beginning with that date."
It is common ground before me that it was open to the Official Receiver to apply for a bankruptcy restrictions order by reference to an allegation both of a preference by reference to paragraph 2(2)(d), and also on the basis that a payment had been made to the detriment of the general body of creditors.
"(1) Where the Secretary of State applies to the court for a bankruptcy restrictions order under paragraph 1 of Schedule 4A to the Act, the application shall be supported by a report by the Secretary of State.
(2) The report shall include—
(a) a statement of the conduct by reference to which it is alleged that it is appropriate for a bankruptcy restrictions order to be made; and
(b) the evidence on which the Secretary of State relies in support of the application."
It is common ground that when considering whether the conduct of a bankrupt justifies the making of a bankruptcy restrictions order, the court is limited to a consideration of the conduct summarised in the statement of conduct contained in the report referred to in Rule 6.241(2).
The Appeal Process
(a) the appeal is a review of the decision of the lower court; and as such(b) an appeal will be allowed only when the Appeal Court considers a decision of the lower court was either
(1) wrong or
(2) unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity;
(c) permission to appeal is to be given only where
(1) the court considers there is a real prospect of success, or
(2) there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard.
Whilst this hearing is both for permission and of the appeal itself, if permission is given, the most convenient course is to hear the parties submissions in full before reaching a conclusion as to whether permission ought to be granted or the appeal allowed.
Factual Background
(a) In February 2008 judgment was entered against the appellant at Southend County Court in the sum of some £21,000-odd, following a trial. The dispute concerned the construction of an extension to the house of a Mr and Mrs Skingley, the successful claimants. The judgment required payment to be made to Mr and Mrs Skingley within 14 days. No payment has ever been made.(b) On the material before me, I conclude that at no material time did the appellant have any assets other than a property at 4 Church Crescent at Mountnessing in Essex ("the Property"). On the date when judgment was entered against him, the appellant instructed estate agents to offer the Property for sale.
(c) On 18th February 2008 Mr and Mrs English agreed to purchase the Property, subject to contract, for £286,000.
(d) On 24th April 2008 the appellant instructed the agents to put the Property back on the market, and on 2nd May 2008 the appellant accepted an offer of £240,000 for the Property from Jewelite Trading Limited, a company of which the appellant's mother was apparently a director. About a month later, Jewelite sold the Property to Mr and Mrs English for in excess of the price that they had agreed to pay for the Property originally.
(e) On 8th May 2008 the appellant was served with a statutory demand by or on behalf of Mr and Mrs Skingley.
(f) The net proceeds of sale of the Property came to £111,120 odd, and were received by the appellant on 14th May 2008. On that date the appellant paid £93,420 of the proceeds to his mother. The remainder was paid away as to £6,500 odd to a firm of solicitors by way of rent for a home for the appellant and his children, £5,000-odd which was transferred to a business account controlled by the appellant, and £3,000-odd which was drawn down as cash, apparently to discharge some credit card debts.
(g) On 6th June 2008 a bankruptcy petition was presented by Mr and Mrs Skingley against the appellant, and on 1st August 2008 the appellant was made bankrupt.
(h) On 29th June 2009 the Official Receiver issued the application for a bankruptcy restrictions order to be made against the appellant.
"Between 14 May 2008 and 1 August 2008 John Going disposed of £111,121 whist subject to a County Court Judgment for £21,415 plus costs, which remained unsatisfied as at the date of the bankruptcy order. In particular;
- On 6 February 2008 a County Court Judgment was made against John Going in the sum of £11,067 plus interest and costs. A statutory demand for £21,415 was served upon him on 8 May 2008.
- On 14 May John Going received £111,121 from the sale of his solely owned property into his bank account. He subsequently transferred £93,420 to a relative in repayment of an existing debt and £5,000 to a building company.
- John Going cashed a cheque for £3,000 on 15 May 2008 and transferred £6,550 to another person on 29 May 2008. He has stated he used the remainder of the funds for everyday living expenses.
- As at the date of the bankruptcy order the judgment remained unsatisfied totalling £65,292. His other non associated creditors totalled £63,430 resulting in a total deficiency of £128,722."
It is apparent from this allegation that
(a) it relates to a period between 14th May and 1st August 2008,(b) it relates to the transfer to "a relative" – actually his mother – of £93,420, and
(c) to three other dispositions which are referred to in the summary of allegations (and which I refer to hereafter collectively as "the minor payments").
As will be apparent from its terms, the allegations do not refer at all to the sale of the Property or the circumstances of such sale, which in any event took place in a period outside that identified in the allegations section of the Official Receiver's report. Although the report referred in terms to the minor payments, by the time the application came before the district judge, they had ceased to form any, or any significant, part of the Official Receiver's case. There was no mention of the minor payments in the Official Receiver's skeleton submissions for the hearing before the district judge, and it is probably for this reason that, aside from one passing reference (to which I will refer in detail hereafter), no mention is made of the minor payments, and no substantive conclusion is reached concerning them in the district judge's judgment.
"I am arranging a £50,000 loan from Barclays Bank, for my home improvements, but I feel it is more important that you should have the funds at your disposal, hopefully easing the pressure that you are obviously under, but I should like some form of agreement for the money, plus the £25,000 that you have had already, making it seventy five thousand pounds. You know how much I love you, and do not want to hurt your feelings, but a few years ago I loaned you £12,000. I cannot remember whether it was for the house or credit cards. Also I paid Aunty Marie £3,200 that I financed on your behalf in 2003.
I would really like you to pay me the £25,000 now, but I will not insist on this being paid immediately, but delay payment if you can give me some sort of assurance that I will not lose this money, and the £50,000 I'm willing to give you. What I mean by assurance is that I must have some sort of guarantee over your property in which you are living so that when it is sold I will get the money from the money that you receive. This money will also be guaranteed from your property so the total of £90,000 is guaranteed from your property. You will appreciate that I require this security because not only am I delaying payment of the current £40,000, but also lending you more money…
Please do not be offended at my asking for agreement."
The appellant responded by an undated letter which, insofar as is material, was to the following effect:
"…I actually feel embarrassed that my own mother should be offering me advice and financial help at my age. The boot should be on the other foot. I am very grateful … I am also aware of the £12,000. It's always in the back of my mind, as is the £3,000 from Auntie Marie. I'm not in the least bit offended that you would like some form of security. I am deeply grateful for delaying payment of the current debt and for lending me the extra £50,000 you have very kindly offered to lend me.
In consideration of the £40,000 you have lent me over the last few years and not insisting on payment of this now, and the £50,000 you are going to lend me now, I'm giving you a 60% share of my interest in my house. At present my house is worth about £280,000 and there is a mortgage of about £120,000. This leaves a value of my share of £160,000. If I give you 60% of my share this will amount to £96,000. Property prices have been going up and I feel that they still will go up, so that the total money that you have already lent me and are going to lend me will always be covered. I also promise that I will not sell the property without consulting you first and if you get desperate for the money I will sell the property whenever you want. I will clearly hold 60% of the property for you.
For all your help Mum, I feel it is only fair that I give you interest on the money and will pay this at 10% per annum when I sell the house. I will get the solicitor to pay you directly the 60% interest. If there should be any shortfall in your money I promise you that I will make it up out of my other 40% share. I hope that you will find this acceptable…"
On the basis of this exchange of correspondence at trial, it was conceded by the Official Receiver that £66,672.20 of the payment by the claimant to his mother was a proper payment, because it was accepted that his mother had a 60% beneficial interest in the Property as a result of the declaration contained in the correspondence set out above.
"The contention that the preference accorded by the Appellant to his mother was something that a layman might reasonably be thought to have accorded with a common sense view of his obligations, and if that was so, it might be indicative of a shorter period for the BRO."
The Judgment of the District Judge
"In my judgment the effect of Mr Going's letter was much as the OR submitted. It only gave rise to an equitable interest in favour of Mrs Going to the extent of 60% of Mr Going's interest in the net proceeds of sale. I reach this conclusion for these reasons:
51.1 The relevant context of the letter was that Mrs Going was already owed substantial sums by Mr Going and she wanted some security if she was to lend more. Mr Going's only asset was the Property and he believed for the reasons set out in the letter that his equity in the asset was worth some £160,000. The total indebtedness for which his mother was asking for security was £96,000.
51.2 The letter sets out the calculations by which Mrs Going to be adequately secured if Mr Going transferred 60% of his net equity. It was only as an afterthought by way of further assurance that Mr Going went on to make the additional promise as to what he would do if there was any shortfall. The material distinction in the letter is between the net equity that would be paid to Mrs Going regardless and a personal promise by Mr Going that he would make up any shortfall.
51.3 This distinction between a proprietary interest and a personal promise is reinforced by the promise in the letter that Mr Going would instruct his solicitor to pay the 60% directly to Mrs Going. This is a clear demonstration that so far as concerns that part of the net proceeds they were to be treated as Mrs Going's money. The same was not to apply to the balance, the 40%, which would be paid to Mr Going.
51.4 It would have been open to Mr Going to promise his mother that she would be repaid whatever was owing to her from any sale of his Property but he didn't do that. For whatever reason Mr Going broke down his equity in the Property (i.e. his rights after repayment of the existing mortgage) into two parts: 60% promised to his mother and 40% which would remain his.
51.5 This analysis takes into account and is not undermined by the existence of the words out of my other 40% share. In my view this is nothing more than recognition by Mr Going that the likely source from which he would need to repay his mother would be the balance of the money to be got from the Property. It did not of itself create any right or interest in that 40% in favour of Mrs Going.
51.6 If the intention was to promise that Mrs Going would get security over the whole of the Property then there would have been no need for the clear and very much worked out 60/40 split in the letter. Reasonably considered such a split is only consistent with the construction I have placed on the letter.
52. As I have indicated I did not have the benefit of detailed submissions from both sides as to the manner in which the correspondence created equitable rights but I find that Mr Going's letter gave rise to a proprietary estoppel in favour of Mrs Going that he would pay her 60% of the net proceeds of sale from his Property which was crystallised by her reliance on it in advancing further sums to Mr Going over the months that followed the exchange of correspondence in August 2007. The mechanism, by which the court would have recognised that equity, if it was relevant, was by way of a constructive trust in her favour. In the event such a trust did not arise because Mr Going voluntarily paid at least that 60% and more to his mother.
53. For the reasons I have set out above no such equity arises in relation to the 40% balance of the net proceeds: the words used by Mr Going in his letter were insufficiently clear to give rise to any promise upon which a proprietary estoppel could be founded even if Mr Going and his mother proved the other elements of such an estoppel. On the contrary the words used, properly construed in the context, amounted to nothing more than a personal promise of payment.
54. It follows that so far as concerns the balance of the monies paid to Mrs Going that, on the basis of the concessions made by the OR, she was nothing more than a general creditor with the same status as, amongst others, Mr and Mrs Skingley."
"68. Since the OR conceded that it was no part of the conduct alleged against Mr Going that the sale of the Property was carried out at an undervalue I do not consider that aspect of the matter save as part of the circumstances surrounding the sale. However, those circumstances as set out above, when combined with the findings I have made regarding Mr Going's intention not to pay anything to Mr and Mrs Skingley leave a strong suspicion regarding that sale.
69. That suspicion is in no way alleviated by the evidence of Mr Going and his mother about the sale. On the contrary I found their evidence about the sale and the circumstances in which it occurred wholly unsatisfactory. In particular, I regard as self-serving Mr Going's explanation that he was ready to accept an offer £40,000 less than the abortive sale because he considered the property market might fall because there were problems in the country.
70. The reality was that the value of around about £280,000 was demonstrated by the original offer from Mr and Mrs England to purchase at that level and then again by the price of £288,000 which Mr and Mrs England paid to purchase it from Jewelite. Against this background Mr Going seems to have agreed in a little over a week once the Property went back on the market on 24 April 2008 to a sale at £40,000 less than he was hoping to get for it.
71. Furthermore this sale, which by reason of price and timing alone required a better and more detailed explanation, was in favour of a company controlled by a relative (albeit quite distant), of which Mrs Going had been a director some years before and whose business, according to Mrs Going, was operating a nightclub. I should add that a witness statement was put in by Mr Going from a Mr West, who describes Jewelite Trading as 'one of my companies' through whom he purchased the Property. Mr West did not attend to give evidence and his statement did not allay any of the concerns arising from the property transaction. Mrs Going's ready explanation that she didn't have anything to do with the company and knew nothing about its business while she was a director added to the concerns regarding the transaction rather than assuaging them.
72. It follows that I regard the dealings with the Property as part and parcel of Mr Going's conduct directed at not paying anything to Mr and Mrs Skingley or of preferring the interests of himself and his mother over and above those of his general body of creditors and in particular of Mr and Mrs Skingley."
"In the light of what I have set out above I conclude that Mr Going's conduct makes it appropriate to grant a bankruptcy restrictions order. The OR has proved the particular conduct set out in the report and that includes in summary: (a) the giving of a preference so far as concerns the payment of £26,747.80; (b) the payment of nothing to Mr and Mrs Skingley in circumstances when monies were available to Mr Going; and (c) bringing about a quick sale of his Property in circumstances where it was inevitable that he would go bankrupt and thus avoiding any independent consideration of his arrangements with his mother prior to realising his only asset and making substantial payments to her."
The Grounds of Appeal
The First Issue
"The whole of the appellants' argument rests on a fundamental misconception of the requirements of condition (vii) of the Bank of England conditions. On their true construction, conditions (vi) and (vii) of the Bank of England's conditions, although positive in form, were negative in substance and merely restricted I.F.T. in the sources from which it might, without the further consent of the Bank of England, lawfully pay sums due to S.B.C. In particular, (i) they did not impose a positive obligation on I.F.T. to pay interest and other charges out of the income of the foreign currency securities or at all; (ii) they did not impose a positive obligation on I.F.T. to repay principal out of the sale proceeds of the foreign currency securities or at all; (iii) they did not impose a positive obligation on I.F.T. to apply the income or sale proceeds of the foreign currency securities in or towards payment of sums due to S.B.C.; but (iv) they merely prohibited I.F.T. from paying sums due to S.B.C. otherwise than out of such income or sale proceeds."
In rejecting the claimant's claim in that case, Lord Wilberforce, who delivered the only substantive opinion before the House, identified the applicable general principle at page 613 A-E in these terms:
"I do not doubt the correctness of the principles of law upon which these appellants, S.B.C., rely and which were stated by the learned judge. These are best summed up in the well-known passage from the judgment of the Privy Council in Palmer v. Carey [1926] AC 703, 706-707, delivered by Lord Wrenbury:
'The law as to equitable assignment, as stated by Lord Truro in Rodick v. Gandell (1852) 1 De G.M. & G. 763, 777, 778, is this: "The extent of the principle to be deduced is that an agreement between a debtor and a creditor that the debt owing shall be paid out of a specific fund coming to the debtor, or an order given by a debtor to his creditor upon a person owing money or holding funds belonging to the giver of the order, directing such person to pay such funds to the creditor, will create a valid equitable charge upon such fund, in other words, will operate as an equitable assignment of the debts or fund to which the order refers." An agreement for valuable consideration that a fund shall be applied in a particular way may found an injunction to restrain its application in another way. But if there be nothing more, such a stipulation will not amount to an equitable assignment. It is necessary to find, further, that an obligation has been imposed in favour of the creditor to pay the debt out of the fund. This is but an instance of a familiar doctrine of equity that a contract for valuable consideration to transfer or charge a subject matter passes a beneficial interest by way of property in that subject matter if the contract is one of which a court of equity will decree specific performance.'
But I find it impossible to extract from the documents any agreement with S.B.C. on the part of I.F.T. to repay the loan out of the F.B.I. securities."
In identifying his reasons for rejecting the claim by SBC, Lord Wilberforce drew attention to the following at paragraphs 613F to 614B:
"In my opinion:
1. Condition (vii) is perhaps capable of two meanings. It might create an obligation to apply the loan portfolio to repayment of the loan and for no other purpose. Or it might create an obligation to repay the loan only out of the loan portfolio and not from any other fund unless authorised. Which of these it is to bear must depend upon the nature of the document in which the condition appears. In a commercial contract, between lender and borrower, the first meaning would be appropriate, possibly the more appropriate of the two. But in a document emanating from the Bank of England, in a context of exchange control, the second is the only one possible. The Bank of England would have no interest whatever in protecting a foreign lender: its concern would be, and certainly was, to prevent foreign currency (Swiss francs) acquired at the official rate from being sold with the investment currency premium. In my opinion condition (vii) imposes nothing more than a negative restriction preventing I.F.T. from repaying the loan otherwise than out of the sale proceeds of the F.I.B.I. securities or other investment currency if approved by the Bank of England.
2. As a matter of contract between S.B.C. and I.F.T., clause 3 (b) of the loan agreement is nothing more than a clause, usual in such agreements designed to ensure that the lender complies with all necessary exchange and control regulations. It cannot convert condition (vii) from an exchange control negative stipulation into one of a different character. There is in fact no agreement with S.B.C. as to the manner of repayment of the loan except that it will be repaid in conformity with Bank of England consent and exchange control regulations."
"A's case was and is that there is nothing unclear or uncertain about the wording of these letters. Quite the contrary, they are unusually clear and precise considering that they are written by 2 lay persons. The intention (and legal effect) of the letters was twofold: (1) A agreed to hold the Property upon trust as to 60% for Mrs A and 40% for himself; and (2) A further agreed that in the event that the Property was sold and the net sale proceeds were insufficient to repay Mrs A's debt out of her 60% interest, he would pay the balance out of his 40% interest. Having accepted (1), it is not understood why R does not accept (2)."
The respondent's position, in summary, was that
(a) the words were not sufficiently clear to create an equitable charge applying the principle as identified by Lord Wilberforce;(b) the analysis of the district judge was correct, because it was consistent with the fact that both thought that 60% of the Property was hers and 40% of the Property was his; and
(c) that given the terms of the correspondence, it would not be unconscionable for the appellant to pay 60% of the proceeds of sale to his mother and leave her to proof for any additional amount in his bankruptcy.
Discussion
a) The appellant had borrowed money from his mother in the past.(b) £25,000 was due back from the appellant to his mother at the time when the letters were exchanged between them, but he could not afford to pay her, even though she wanted repayment at that time.
(c) It is to be inferred that at the time of the agreement the appellant's only asset of value was the Property. In my judgment, this is to be inferred from the fact that £25,000 was said to be due for repayment to the appellant's mother but he could not repay it, and from the fact that not merely could he not repay the £25,000 that was owing, but also needed to borrow a further £50,000.
(d) The appellant's mother was willing to lend the appellant a further £50,000 which she herself was borrowing, but was prepared to do so only on the basis that the total of the sums lent to the appellant down to 25th August 2007 and the further sums to be lent by her were to be guaranteed for repayment from the proceeds of sale of the appellant's Property.
(e) Whilst the expectation of the appellant as derived from the language of his letter was that he expected property values to continue to rise and that his mother's 60% interest in the Property would be more than sufficient to enable her to recover the sums lent, the interest thereon that he agreed to pay and something in addition, the need to make provision for what was to happen in the event that that was not so was obvious, and, given the terms of his mother's demand and his own financial situation, the solution equally so.
The Effect Of the Minor Payments
"The Official Receiver contends that Mr Going's conduct in making the payment to his mother such that she was repaid some £26,000 of her debt, and his accelerating the sale of his property to enable him to do so before being made bankrupt, is such as to warrant a bankruptcy restrictions order being made. The payment was to the detriment of the general body of his creditors, and amounted to a preference of his mother."
Not surprisingly in these circumstances, no part of the district judge's judgment suggests that the order that he made was attributable to the minor payments – see in particular paragraph 73 of the judgment, as set out above. It is true that the district judge did refer to the rent payment in passing at paragraphs 63 to 64 of his judgment, but the only point apparently being made was that the payment would not have been necessary but for the sale of the Property, which in turn feeds into the conclusion arrived at by the district judge at paragraph 73(c) of the judgment relating to what is called by the district judge "the quick sale".
Issues 2 and 3
"While I accept, in light both of principle and of Rule 3(3), that it is of the essence that a director is not disqualified under the 1986 Act for a course of conduct which is not the subject matter of a specific charge (and, indeed, which is specifically disavowed as a topic of criticism), it does not appear to me to be illegitimate to take into account that course of conduct as part of the background against which the seriousness of a charge which has been made and established is to be judged. A wrongful action may be explicable, even wholly forgivable, when carried out in one set of circumstances; yet an effectively identical action may, in different circumstances, be open to serious criticism. On that basis, it appears to me to have been quite legitimate for the Registrar to have taken into account the fact that the Payment was made in the context of the Project which was being implemented at the time, and which Mr Baker himself accepted involved risk (albeit not, he thought, for the creditors of the Company)."
I have no doubt at all that it was entirely legitimate for the district judge to take into account all the circumstances that surrounded the payments made by the appellant to his mother. This would have included, as I have already said, matters such as (a) whether the appellant subjectively believed he was under an obligation to pay on the hypothetical assumption that there was, as a matter of law, no obligation to pay his mother in preference to his general creditors, and (b) whether he had such a belief on reasonable grounds. However, the district judge's approach was entirely different. He expressly had regard to the circumstances of the sale as part of the conduct which formed the basis for the making of the BRO – see, in particular, paragraph 72 of the judgment set out above. I accept entirely that it would have been preferable for this point to have been identified as an issue for the district judge at the outset of the hearing, and I also accept that it was not identified in that way by the appellant's then counsel (not, I emphasise, his counsel at the hearing of the appeal). However, balanced against that point has to be the point that the issue I am now concerned with goes to procedural fairness, to which all parties are bound to have regard. The issue was addressed by counsel for the appellant at least to a degree – see the transcript at page 142. That ought to have been sufficient to alert the district judge to consider with some care whether the course he was being invited to embark upon on behalf of the Official Receiver was one that he ought safely to adopt. Had this been the only issue in respect of which the appeal had succeeded, I would have concluded that the question of whether a BRO should have been imposed and, if so, for how long, could be decided by me by reference to the existing material, but leaving out of account the issue concerning the speed of sale, which, in my judgment, ought not to have been taken into account. However, and given the circumstances attending the resolution of the principal issue set out above, it seems to me entirely inappropriate that I should embark upon that exercise at this stage on the hypothetical basis that the clear conclusions I have reached in relation to the principal point are wrong.
Conclusion