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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 >> Masters v Barclays Bank Plc [2013] EWHC 2166 (Ch) (19 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/2166.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2166 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
1 Oxford Row Leeds LS1 |
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B e f o r e :
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Darren Neil Masters |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Barclays Bank Plc |
Respondent |
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Mark Harper (instructed by Squire Sanders) for the Respondent/Petitioner
Hearing dates: 11 July 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Norris :
"Mr Darren Neil Masters of SN Advisory LLP Marian House… Leeds… Occupation Unknown".
Paragraph 1 of the standard form petition deals with the EC Regulation; but all of its alternatives were deleted. Instead the petition recited
"The debtor is not resident in England and Wales. I am presenting this petition to this County Court because Rule 6.9A[(3)][(5)][(6)] applies and within the 6 months immediately preceding its presentation the debtor has carried on business in England and Wales and for the longest part of the period during which the debtor carried on business within that period of 6 months the place of business has been situated in the district of this County Court".
a) Is domiciled in England and Wales; or
b) Is personally present in England and Wales on the day when the petition is presented; or
c) Has at any time in the period of 3 years ending with the day on which the petition is presented
i) Been ordinarily resident or had a place of residence in England and Wales; or
ii) Carried on business in England and Wales.
Of those options Barclays elected for (c)(ii). Accordingly the burden lay on Barclays to establish that Mr Masters had carried on business in England and Wales sometime after the 16 May 2009.
"…the Petition is based on an assertion that I have carried on business in England for the longest part of 6 months preceding the Petition. To be more precise that I have carried on such a business in the district of the Leeds County Court. This is just wrong…for the avoidance of doubt I am a member of SN of Marian House…SN is an LLP which was established in August 2011. Its members are Richard Simon Wilson who resides in Ireland and myself… I personally do not carry on any business in England nor was I carrying business on in England at any time in the 3 years preceding the presentation of the petition. It is true that I have been from time to time a director or member of a number of companies or LLPs that have been registered in the UK but I am advised that does not constitute the carrying on of business by me…I left the UK in 2007 after the breakup of my marriage and I established a company in Monaco and I was based there as a resident since 2007… I am now in the process of moving my business base to Florida where I have my permanent family home…It is common knowledge that I was a director of an English company [MTG] until it went into administration on 8 September 2009. In order to realise the assets of MTG…at the request of the administrators… SN was formed…"
"A Tax Advisor either through SN Advisory LLP or independently of that partnership".
a) To refer to the website of SN Advisory LLP (which said that Mr Masters worked out of the Monaco office but was in London and Leeds usually at least once a week):
b) To refer to the circumstances of the service of the statutory demand (where the recipient had said that Mr Masters worked from time to time at the office in Leeds but that it was not his main business trading address):
c) To refer to a number of UK appointments which Mr Masters held with MTG, SN Advisory LLP and associated companies:
d) To refer to the Guarantee (but only to the governing law and exclusive jurisdiction clauses, rather than to the provisions dealing with residence):
e) To note the fact that Mr Masters held a current solicitors' practicing certificate.
No reliance was placed on Mr Masters having any involvement with the business of acquiring aircraft for the purposes of commercial charter.
"I do not see how the jurisdiction and venue clauses of the Guarantee prove that I was carrying on business at the relevant time."
"The Debtor was carrying on a business independently of that of [Coldstream] (i.e. the acquiring of the Aircraft which, having agreed the same, he sought to complete through and using [Coldstream])".
a) That he had been asked to deal with the case on the basis of the written material and submissions without the benefit of cross-examination;
b) Mr Masters had personally contracted to buy the aircraft;
c) That Coldstream had been formed solely for the purpose of purchasing the aircraft;
d) Coldstream was therefore a vehicle whereby Mr Masters passed on his personal liability and obligations, and in doing so he took on full responsibility for the operation of the Loan Agreement;
e) That on the evidence Coldstream "as did no doubt the debtor" intended to operate the plane commercially i.e. to carry on as a business;
f) That the issue before him was whether or not that business had been carried on in the preceding 3 years;
g) That he was satisfied "that one month before the applicable period …. the company which he had formed solely for this purpose… drew down the money in order to operate this aeroplane";
h) The novation of the contract was on the basis that Mr Masters' personal guarantee covered all of the subsisting liabilities and the responsibilities that he would have had if he had continued to purchase the aeroplane in his own name;
i) That although this was a single transaction the decision in Conroy v Kenny [1999] 1 WLR 1340 was authority for the proposition that a "one-off" transaction can still amount to trading;
j) That the extensive nature of the personal guarantee and the fact that Coldstream was substituted for Mr Masters' own purchase obligations were (on the authority of Re Brauch [1978] 1 Ch 316) sufficient to satisfy him that the debtor "was carrying on business in England and Wales by that operation of his obligations through that company and by the guarantee of the extensive obligations of that company";
k) That there was therefore jurisdiction to make a bankruptcy order.
a) Whether Mr Masters was carrying on a business after the 16 May 2009 in England is a mixed question of fact and law. It involves District Judge Jordan deciding what Mr Masters did, when he did it, and whether what he did amounted in law to carrying on of a business.
b) The appeal is a review, and not a re-hearing. But once an Appellant has shown a real prospect that a finding or inference made by the trial judge in wrong, then the role of the Appellate court is to determine whether or not this is so, giving full weight to the advantages enjoyed by the judge at first instance. The weight to be attached to the findings of the judge will depend upon the extent to which, as the trial judge, the judge has an advantage over the appellate court: the greater that advantage the more reluctant the appellate court will be to interfere. See generally Assicurazioni Generali [2002] EWCA Civ 1642 at paragraphs [15] and [17].
c) An appeal on fact is different from the review of the exercise of a judge's discretion. It is not because there is room for two views of the facts that the appeal court is reluctant to interfere with the trial judges conclusions. A finding of fact involves a finding that, on the balance of probability, something actually existed, or an event actually occurred. The deference that the appeal court pays to the judges finding of fact is dependant on the advantage that the judge had by reason of participating in the trial process: there are plainly cases in which the appeal court is in as good a position as the judge, for example in drawing inferences from documents: see Manning v Stylianou [2006] EWCA Civ 1655 at paragraph [19].
d) The burden lay on Barclays to prove that, on the balance of probabilities, Mr Masters carried on a business in England after the 16 May 2009.
e) DJ Jordan had to assess whether that burden had been discharged by reference only to the transactional documents. Barclays led no direct evidence that Mr Masters had been involved in the business of acquiring aircraft for charter businesses in England after May 2009.
f) Mr Masters did give direct evidence that he had not carried on business in England since October 2007. Before that unchallenged evidence is disbelieved the court is required to exercise caution. It is sometimes said that the evidence has to be "inherently unbelievable" (though that may not fully capture the subtlety of the test): see Wilkinson Commissioners of Inland Revenue [1998] BPIR 418.
g) It was common ground that merely being a director of or shareholder in a company or being a member of a limited liability partnership would of themselves not suffice to establish that an individual was carrying on business in England. That was why the "tax advisor case" was reduced to its secondary position at the hearing before the District Judge (and did not feature at all in the argument before me). It was also common ground that the mere giving of a guarantee could not of itself amount to the carrying on of business.
h) It is nonetheless possible for an individual who is a participator in several companies himself to carry on an independent business. Section 4(1)(d) of the Bankruptcy Act 1914 was a predecessor of section 265 of the Insolvency Act 1986. It provided that a creditor should not be entitled to present a bankruptcy petition against a debtor unless the debtor within a year before the date of presentation of the petition "has carried on business in England, personally or by means of an agent or manager". In Re Brauch [1978] 1 Ch 316 at [328] Goff LJ (with whom the other members of the court agreed) held:-
"It would be wrong to hold that section 4(1)(d) applies to a man who is running his companies business even though he be the sole beneficial shareholder and in complete control. There is, however, nothing in Salomon v Salomon [1897] AC 22 in consistent with finding that such a person is also conducting a separate business of his own…".
At p330F Goff LJ said that in order to reach that conclusion:-
"One has to take the totality of the evidence and see whether or not the right conclusion is that there was…a business being carried on by the debtor independently of the business of the companies".
"… a person does not cease to be a trader when he puts up his shutters and does not come near the place, but he is deemed to be for all purposes a trader until he has paid all the debts relating to the trade. Here there is a debt of £25,000 which has not yet been paid and which was contracted in the course of trade for the very purpose of enabling her to acquire these lands. I think one is entitled, nay, bound, to have regard to the fact that she has promoted [the other three hotels]…"
The circumstances may thus indicate that in a particular context a single transaction is sufficient to demonstrate the carrying on of a business.
a) He personally contracted to buy a aircraft:
b) He became the sole shareholder in a Luxembourg company established a few days later:
c) He participated in a novation of the aircraft purchase contract to that company:
d) He facilitated the completion of that purchase contract by agreeing to give a personal guarantee to enable the company to borrow from Barclays:
e) He probably assisted in procuring MTG to give a corporate guarantee (because where documents are to be served on MTG they are to be marked for Mr Masters attention, thereby suggesting both a degree of knowledge and an assumption of responsibility on his part):
f) The probability is that the purchase, the incorporation, the novation and the financing are not are succession of happy accidents, but are part of a plan.
a) There is simply no evidence as to where the contract for the purchase of the plane was negotiated, or by what law it is governed, or which courts have jurisdiction over disputes. It cannot be assumed that the contract itself has any connection with England.
b) The plane was originally to be registered in Luxembourg:
c) The plane was maintained in America.
d) There is simply no evidence about the novation of the contract. One cannot assume any connection with England.
e) The Loan Agreement contains and English choice of law clause and provides for English jurisdiction.
f) The Loan Agreement was signed by Mr Masters in Sheffield.
g) The borrower is a Luxembourg company:
h) The Loan Agreement is secured by a Luxembourg mortgage.
i) The Loan Agreement is supported by the Guarantee.
j) The Guarantee was signed in America.
k) The Guarantee contains and English choice of law clause and for the jurisdiction of the English courts.
l) The address for service under the Loan Agreement is MTG's address (for the attention of Mr Masters).
m) The Guarantee declared that Mr Masters was resident in England and contained an obligation to maintain an English residency.
n) The Guarantee provided before notices to be sent to (and proceedings to be served at) MTG's address at Leeds marked for the attention of Mr Masters.