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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 >> Williams v Glover & Anor [2013] EWHC 1447 (Ch) (04 June 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/1447.html Cite as: [2014] 2 All ER 448, [2014] 1 WLR 166, [2014] 1 BCLC 474, [2013] EWHC 1447 (Ch), [2013] WLR(D) 223, [2014] WLR 166, [2013] BPIR 576 |
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CHNANCERY DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
1 Bridge Street West Manchester M60 9DJ |
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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 GP Aviation Group International Limited (in Liquidation); and | ||
IN THE MATTER OF The Insolvency Act 1986 | ||
STEVEN JOHN WILLIAMS | ||
(Acting as Liquidator of GP Aviation Group International Limited) | Applicant | |
- and - | ||
COLIN NEIL GLOVER | ||
MARK NICHOLAS PEARSON | Respondents |
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Hearing date: 17th May 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Pelling QC:
Introduction
The Factual Background
The Parties' Contentions in Summary
i) Whether the right to appeal against a tax liability constitutes the "property" of the Company ("Issue 1");ii) Whether the Applicant has power to "sell" such property ("Issue 2");
iii) Whether the exercise of such a power will be effective to assign the right to appeal ("Issue 3"); and
iv) Whether it is proper for the Applicant to assign the right to appeal ("Issue 4").
Discussion
The statutory framework against which this question is to be resolved in contained in the IA. S.144 obliges a liquidator to take control of "… all the property and things in action to which the company is or appears to be entitled …". "Property" is defined by s.436 as including:
"… money, goods, things in action, land and every description of property wherever situated and also obligations and every description of interest, whether present or future or vested or contingent, arising out of, or incidental to, property …"
The liquidator's powers are set out in IA, Schedule 4. Those powers include:
Part II
Powers Exercisable without Sanction in Voluntary Winding Up, with Sanction in Winding Up by the Court
…
4. Power to bring or defend any action or other legal proceeding in the name and on behalf of the company.
…
Part III
Powers Exercisable Without Sanction in any Winding Up
…
6. Power to sell any of the company's property by public auction or private contract with power to transfer the whole of it to any person or to sell the same in parcels.
"… there is usually no question of the cause of action having vested in the trustee. Unless the defence is set off … the bankrupt will not be asserting by way of defence any cause of action of his own. But in cases in which the Plaintiff is claiming an interest in some property of the bankrupt, that property will have vested in the trustee. And in claims for debt or damages, the only assets out of which the claim can be satisfied will have likewise vested. It will therefore be equally true to say that the bankrupt has no issue in the proceedings. …"
In adopting that approach Hoffmann LJ cited Rochfort v. Battersby (1849) 2 H.L.Cas. 388. In that case a bankrupt sought to appeal to the House of lords and was held not to be entitled to do so because the bankruptcy legislation then in force had the effect of "… divesting the insolvent of all title and interest in the property, which would authorise or justify him in entering into any litigation respecting it.". This led Hoffman LJ to conclude that "… in principle a bankrupt cannot in his own name appeal from a judgment against him that is enforceable only against the estate vested in his trustee".
"Although it was not, as far as I can see, expressly stated in Heath v. Tang that the right to appeal vested in the trustee, authority demonstrates that this is the position. Thus in Wordsworth v. Dixon … Sir Thomas Bingham MR giving the judgment of the court said this referring to Heath …
'… that clearly establishes that on the vesting of a bankrupt's estate in the trustee, the right to challenge a judgment which would takes effect against the estate vests in the trustee. That means that the right to seek leave to appeal … vests in [the trustee] …'
… Hoffmann LJ was also a member of the court that decided Wordsworth … there can be no doubt therefore that he was of the view that the right to appeal vested in the trustee even if he did not expressly say as much in Heath …"
"Some rights created by statute can constitute property, but a right to appeal does not have the character of property merely because it is a creature of statute. A chose in action may be the property of the person entitled to enforce it but a liability to satisfy a judgment enforcing a chose in action is not property of the person against whom the judgment is entered. A liability is not property of the person liable. Nor is a right to appeal against a money judgment property of the judgment debtor. … as a matter of ordinary language a judgment debtor's right of appeal against the judgment is not property."
Some time is taken up explaining Boaler (ante) that had apparently been relied on in earlier Australian decisions for the proposition that a right of appeal was to be treated as property. In my judgment that was mistaken because Boaler (ante) was concerned with whether a bankrupt could continue an action in which he was seeking to set aside an earlier judgment on the ground that it had been obtained by fraud. That was refused because the right to continue the actions commenced by the bankrupt was a chose in action that had vested in the trustee on the making of the bankruptcy order. The commencement or continuation of the actions was not in any sense an exercise of a right of appeal. It was a fresh claim, which was necessarily a chose in action. On that ground alone that case does not provide central assistance on the issue now under consideration. That was precisely the point made by the majority in Cummings (ante) at 194. I respectfully agree with that analysis.
In the light of this conclusion it is not necessary or desirable that I express any view about the second and third issues identified by the parties. Likewise strictly it is not necessary for me to say anything further about the fourth issue identified by the parties. However, I should make clear that absent the agreement of the office holder I would not have sanctioned the assignment of the right of appeal to the Respondents even if it was a right capable of being assigned. In brief my reasons for reaching that conclusion are as follows. The assignment of the right to appeal without being able to assign or novate the liability would place the office holder in a potentially invidious position – an unreasonable and intransigent position might be adopted in relation to the appeal that might expose the Company to penalties interest and costs that could otherwise have been avoided. This risk is not one that the court should sanction given the potential implications for creditors as a whole. The office holder would have no control over whether the appeal was persisted in or whether any offers to settle should be accepted. Additionally, the interests of the Respondents are not entirely ad idem with those of the creditors generally. Their interest lies in attempting to overturn the assessments at all costs. That is not necessarily the interest of creditors generally, if the consequence was to increase overall the amount of liabilities that had to be met from the Company's estate or reduce what might be collected for the estate – as might be the case if the means of the Respondents are finite and the cost of running the appeals materially reduced what they would have available to meet the Applicant's claims against them.
Disposal