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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 >> Kasumu v Arrow Global (Guernsey) Ltd [2013] EWHC 789 (Ch) (27 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/789.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 789 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
110 Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL. |
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B e f o r e :
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MUSELIN OMOTAYO KASUMU |
Appellant |
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-v- |
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ARROW GLOBAL (GUERNSEY) LTD |
Respondents |
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John Larking Verbatim Reporters
(Verbatim Reporters and Tape Transcribers)
Suite 91, Temple Chambers, 3-7 Temple Avenue
London EC4Y 0HP.
Tel: 020 7404 7464 Fax: 020 7404 7443 DX: 13 Chancery Lane LDE
MISS JENNIFER MEECH (instructed by solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondents.
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE ASPLIN:
'District Judge Major: No witness statement? Mr Kasumu: No. The one… District Judge Major: The petition creditor shall file and serve second petition on the creditor by 21 days. The debtor shall file a Defence/Objections by 21 days. 24th August for you to file your objections. Permission to petitioning creditor to file a statement in reply if so advised by 14th September. Bankruptcy hearing and permissive application at first available date after 17th September. So there will not be a separated hearing in relation to the permission but I am going to say that they need to be put in writing on the same occasion rather than creating two hearings.'
'District Judge Major: I have indicated, Mr Kasumu, I am not dealing with costs today in relation to that. Those are the matters that you must put in your witness statement and I will see you in September when the matter comes back for a bankruptcy hearing. The point that I was making is this, simply because the petition was dismissed previously and you rely very heavily in your application on the case of Henderson which is a case that says all matters concerning a case should be brought together and once a court has decided on something you cannot come back and have another go at it – Mr Kasumu: Yes. District Judge Major: However, in relation to bankruptcy proceedings, if the petition was simply dismissed because the Claimant did not attend then that may well be that the court has not decided upon it and they are entitled to bring a further application. So it is a matter that you might want to take some advice upon. It is not automatic that they cannot issue a second petition.'
'Whilst I understand the District Judge's desire to have a roll-up hearing which would consider first the question of permission under Rule 6.26 and then, if permission were given, the bankruptcy petition itself, the Appellant has a real prospect of successfully arguing on the appeal that a second petition cannot be presented until the petitioner has been granted permission under Rule 6.26 whereas the order of 10th July 2012 allowed the petitioner to present a second petition even before the court had decided to grant permission under Rule 6.26.'
In fact, as I have already mentioned, it is clear that the second petition had already been presented. In my judgment, in light of the extract from the transcript to which I have referred, it is relatively clear that the order requiring service of the second petition was not authorising presentation of a further what would be a third petition or authorising presentation without permission. It seems to me that it came about in an attempt to create clarity.
'The Petitioner filed a second petition without seeking or obtaining the permission of the court at a time when the first bankruptcy petition in 2010 in relation to the same debt was dismissed in the same County Court. The Petitioner did not seek to reinstate or appeal against the dismissal of the first petition but has sought to re-litigate the matter by filing the second petition No 0591 of 2012.'
The second ground is that the District Judge by not ordering the petitioning creditor to re-serve the Statutory Demand gave the petitioning creditor a second bite of the cherry, which goes against Article 6, equality of arms and just case management and is contrary to the Insolvency Rules and the Act. In the circumstances therefore the Appellant says that the second petition is an abuse of process and Insolvency Rule 6.26 itself and accordingly that the District Judge erred in law when she granted permission to present the second petition. As I understand it from Mr Emele, who with my permission made submissions on behalf of the Appellant, this is a reference to the second paragraph of the order by which the District Judge required the Respondent to file and serve the second petition upon the debtor within 21 days.
'If the petitioning creditor fails to appear on the hearing of the petition no subsequent petition against the same debtor either alone or jointly with any other person shall be presented by the same creditor in respect of the same debt without the permission of the court to which the previous petition was presented.'
In effect the Appellant through Mr Emele has submitted that the District Judge should have dismissed the second petition on 10th July. He appeared to accept that contrary to the Notice of Appeal she had not actually given permission there and then but adjourned both the hearing of the bankruptcy petition and the application for permission to come on together at a later date. He said that she was too generous in doing so and her only option was to have dismissed the second petition at that stage. He said that was because first in fact the order made in 2010 was on the merits, it having been recorded in the order that the evidence had been read and was not for want of appearance by the creditor and therefore IR 6.26 was not engaged. That was something which does not appear from the Notice of Appeal. Secondly, in any event the further petition was an abuse of process. Thirdly, alternatively, by failing to dismiss the second petition the District Judge had brought into play Insolvency Rule 7.55 and could only remedy the defect of an absence of permission for the petition if no injustice would be caused and the order of the court could remedy any injustice. This, he says, was not the case given the alleged irregularities in documents, the opportunity to bring a third party insurer in, who was allegedly liable for the debt, and the inability to seek to set aside the Statutory Demand or rely on the Consumer Credit Act provisions.
'The decision of the House of Lords in Seal and the Court of Appeal in Adorian require the court in cases such as the present to look beyond the language of the Section to the entire context of the provision, its purposes and the consequences of a decision as to its effect with a general predisposition that the lack of prior permission should not render the proceedings a nullity.'