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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 >> SSRL Realisations Ltd, Re [2015] EWHC 2590 (Ch) (14 September 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/2590.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2590 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
IN THE MATTER OF SSRL REALISATIONS LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division)
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LAZARI INVESTMENTS LIMITED |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) PETER MARK SAVILLE (administrator) (2) ALASTAIR PAUL BEVERIDGE (administrator) (3) CATHERINE WILLIAMSON (administrator) (4) SSRL REALISATIONS LIMITED (in administration) |
Respondents |
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Katharine Holland QC (instructed by Taylor Wessing LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 17 and 24 June 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
RICHARD SPEARMAN Q.C.:
Introduction
Background and outline of the dispute
The hearing on 17 June 2015
The hearing on 24 June 2015
The law
"18. The 1986 Act, as amended, provides for a statutory moratorium on the making of an administration order by postponing the enforcement of substantive rights. It derives from, and is in similar terms to, section 11(3) (d) of the 1986 Act, which was construed by this court in Atlantic Computer Systems. Paragraph 43 of Schedule B1 provides that"(6) No legal process (including legal proceedings, execution, distress and diligence) may be instituted or continued against the company or property of the company except (a) with the consent of the administrator, or (b) with the permission of the court"19. The relevant purpose of the administration is to achieve "a better result for the company's creditors as a whole than would be likely if the company were wound up (without first being in administration)" and to do so "in the interests of the company's creditors as a whole": paragraph 3 Schedule B1.
20. The administrators are officers of the court. They have power to do anything necessary or expedient for the management of the affairs, business and property of the Company. In exercising their functions they act as agents of the Company. The wide powers include sale of the property of the Company: see paragraphs 59 and 60 of Schedule B1.
21. According to Atlantic Computer Systems the burden is on Sunberry to make out its case and to satisfy the court that it is inequitable for it to be prevented from commencing the intended proceedings. The administrators accept that the Company acted in breach of clause 3.18.1 of the Lease in granting YHL a licence to occupy the Property and that Sunberry has a seriously arguable case for the relief claimed in the intended proceedings, though they would dispute whether a mandatory injunction should be granted.
22. The guidance in Atlantic Computer Systems also states that the court, in seeking to give effect to the statutory purpose of the administration, has to conduct a balancing exercise of the legitimate interests of the lessor and the legitimate interests of other creditors of the Company. The court has to compare the financial loss suffered by the landlord, if permission to commence proceedings is refused and he is temporarily denied the relief sought, with the loss suffered by the other creditors, if permission to issue proceedings is granted. The court must take into account money paid by the administrators to compensate the landlord. The court attaches great importance to the proprietary interests of a landlord, who should not be prejudiced by the way in which the administration is conducted "save to the extent that this may be unavoidable and even then this will usually be acceptable only to a strictly limited extent": see page 542G-H.
23. In considering the loss suffered by the other creditors of the Company the guidance states that
"If substantially greater loss would be caused to others by the grant of leave, or loss which is out of all proportion to the benefit which leave would confer on the lessor, that may outweigh the loss to the lessor caused by a refusal": see page 543A-B."
"this is not a case like Atlantic Computer Systems, where the lessor is seeking to re-possess his property because of non-payment of rent. Sunberry wants YHL to remain in possession as its tenant under an assigned or new lease, rather than being in occupation under a licence from the Company."
"51. … one of the main purposes of the administration was a continuation of the collection of the book debts for the benefit of the creditors of the Company in administration. In order to achieve that it was essential for YHL to occupy the Property and so take over and perform the Company's contracts by storage and distribution of the goods of the customers, many of whom owed money to the company …52. The Company enjoyed a continuing benefit from YHL's occupation of the Property. Sunberry would also benefit. The Company did not have the funds to pay the rent under the Lease. For its occupation of the Property YHL would pay Sunberry a monthly payment equal to the passing rent."
"the judge ought to have carried out the balancing exercise in accordance with the Atlantic Computers guidance. The balancing of the legitimate interests of Sunberry, on the one hand, and the legitimate interests of the Company's creditors, on the other hand, is necessary. Occupation of the Property is required for the purposes of the administration. The judge ought to have asked himself whether Sunberry had shown that it was inequitable to prevent it from commencing the proceedings for a mandatory injunction. Instead, he relied on a range of inadequate reasons for not carrying out the balancing exercise: the achievement of the purpose of the administration; the breach of clause 3.18.1; the need for the administrators to find someone willing to take an assignment of the Lease; and the reprehensible manner in which the administrators had dealt with Sunberry."
"65. Turning to the substance of the appeal, the purpose of the administration had not been achieved. The company had outstanding book debts, and one of the objects of the administration was to collect them for the benefit of the creditors. The administrators reasonably feared that if it failed to perform its existing contracts with its customers they would seek to set off their resulting losses from those debts. Indeed, it seems to me to be obvious that if the company's customers lost the food stored at the Property, they would be bound to deduct their losses from the sums they owed the company. The retention of the Property to enable those contracts to be completed was, therefore, in the interests of the creditors and promoted the achievement of the purpose of the administration.66. As to the exercise by the Court of its discretion under paragraph 43 of Schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986, it is inherent in the provisions of subparagraphs (4) and (6) that administration may preclude a landlord from enforcing the terms of his lease. He can enforce them only with the consent of the administrator or the permission of the court. When considering whether to grant or to refuse leave, the court has regard to the consequences of the administration and of the order sought for the persons affected by them: in other words, it follows the guidance given in Atlantic Computers.
67. In this case, it was obvious from the fact that Sunberry was not seeking to forfeit the lease of the Property that the rent payable under the lease was higher than the current market rent. If the rent that would be obtained by Sunberry by re-letting the Property were higher than the lease rent, there would be no reason for Sunberry not to seek forfeiture. It follows that Sunberry had benefited from the making of the administration order, together with the agreement entered by the administrators with YHL and the administrators' agreement to pay to Sunberry the sums paid by YHL for the occupation of the Property at the same rate as the rent payable under the lease, as against what it would have received if the company had gone into liquidation. Apart from its so-called bargaining position, all that Sunberry would lose if the court refused permission to it to enforce the terms of the lease by the grant of the mandatory injunction it sought would be the difference between interest on the lease rent if it were paid quarterly in advance, as required by the lease, and interest on the lease rent paid monthly in arrears. As against that, if Sunberry were permitted to bring proceedings for a mandatory injunction that would, if granted, prevent the Company and YHL from continuing to perform the Company's outstanding contracts. The likelihood was that the collection of the Company's debts would be substantially prejudiced, with consequential loss to the creditors. When weighing the loss relied upon by Sunberry as against the potential loss to the creditors of the Company the result was obviously in favour of refusing permission."
(1) If granting leave to a lessor of land to exercise his proprietary rights and re-possess his land or goods is unlikely to impede the achievement of the purpose of the administration, leave should normally be given (at p542, guideline (2)).
(2) In other cases when a lessor seeks possession the court has to carry out a balancing exercise, balancing the legitimate interests of the lessor and the legitimate interests of the other creditors of the company. The exercise is not a mechanical one; each case calls for an exercise in judicial judgment, in which the court seeks to give effect to the purpose of the statutory provisions, having regard to the parties' interests and all the circumstances of the case. The purpose of the prohibition is to enable or assist the achievement of the object of the administration. The purpose of the power to give leave is to enable the court to relax the prohibition where it would be inequitable for the prohibition to apply (at p542, guideline (3)).
(3) It will normally be a sufficient ground for the grant of leave if significant loss would be caused to the lessor by a refusal. For this purpose loss comprises any kind of financial loss, direct or indirect, including loss by reason of delay, and may extend to loss which is not financial (at pp542-543, guideline (5)).
(4) In assessing these respective losses the court will have regard to matters such as: the financial position of the company, its ability to pay the rental arrears and the continuing rentals, the administrator's proposals, the period for which the administration order has already been in force and is expected to remain in force, the effect on the administration if leave were given, the effect on the applicant if leave were refused, the end result sought to be achieved by the administration, the prospects of that result being achieved, and the history of the administration so far (at p543, guideline (6)).
(5) In considering these matters it will often be necessary to assess how probable the suggested consequences are. Thus if loss to the applicant is virtually certain if leave is refused, and loss to others a remote possibility if leave is granted, that will be a powerful factor in favour of granting leave (at p543, guideline (7)).
(6) This is not an exhaustive list. For example, the conduct of the parties may also be a material consideration in a particular case (at p543, guideline (8)).
"Cases where leave is refused but terms are imposed can be expected to arise frequently. For example, the permanent loss to a lessor flowing from his inability to recover his property will normally be small if the administrator is required to pay the current rent. In most cases this should be possible, since if the administration order has been rightly made the business should generally be sufficiently viable to hold down current outgoings. Such a term may therefore be a normal term to impose".
"14. … There has been a business sale by the administrators very shortly after the commencement of the administration. It was one under which the buyer was given occupation under a licence with full risk of the consequences of that occupation being without the landlords' consent. The buyer has … made what seems to me to be a half-hearted application for consent to an assignment which was refused … and has not since been pursued. The buyer has not sought to avail itself of its right to use the company's name for the purpose of bringing any claim that consent has been unreasonably delayed or withheld. Indeed, it seems to me obvious that no such claim could properly be brought. The consequence, as I understand it, from the limited parts of the business sale agreement which I have been shown, is that it matters not for the beneficial realisation of [the company's] property in the administration whether the landlord is or is not able to exercise its proprietary rights by seeking recovery of possession of the property because, the buyer having taken full risk of the exercise of those rights, there will be no adverse consequences for the administration. [Counsel] for the administrators, has very frankly acknowledged (large parts of the agreement being redacted) that there was no provision for deferred consideration, for example, such that the amount payable under the business sale agreement could be adversely affected if possession were taken of the property as against Baker. It seems to me, therefore, that the purpose of this administration has been substantially achieved by the business sale agreement and would in no way be interfered with by the immediate permission given by this court to the landlords to pursue their proprietary rights …16. I should add that, even if, contrary to the clear impression which I have formed and have described, there was some possible impediment to the full achievement of the purposes of the administration by the court giving immediate permission, the conduct of a balancing exercise in the manner set out by Nicholls LJ., which I acknowledge incidentally is not a mechanical exercise but the exercise of judgment by the court, could only come down in favour of giving the landlords the permission which they seek. The evidence demonstrates a real prospect that the landlords would suffer loss, indeed financial loss, by reason of, for example, the delay caused by being unable to enforce their rights, in particular because of the probable adverse effect of any such delay upon their conduct of negotiations for the grant of a new lease of the premises at a higher rent to an apparently satisfactory retail chain with a good covenant. Against that, there seem to me to be no countervailing considerations such as might to alleviate any prejudice to the administration if permission were either refused or delayed."
"I must deal, finally, with the submission by [Counsel for the administrators] that in giving permission I should nonetheless limit it to permission to forfeit by legal proceedings rather than peaceful re-entry. He submitted that it was generally unsatisfactory to have locks changed during the night, but it does not seem to me that the court, exercising its administration jurisdiction, is particularly concerned with that, nor has the court any reason to suppose that a peaceable re-entry would be anything otherwise than lawful. As far as I can see, although the court has power to impose any relevant conditions, conditions which the court should impose are not those which they think might be generally useful but conditions which would serve the purposes of the administration. I have been unable to identify any purpose of the administration which would be served by imposing the suggested condition. As [Counsel for the landlords] pointed out, if relief from forfeiture is to be sought pursuant to the buyer's right to do so in the name of [the company] under the business sale agreement, an application for relief could be made by a separate proceedings rather than, as [Counsel for the administrators] suggested would be more convenient, by way of counterclaim to forfeiture proceedings. There is, as it seems to me, no real indication that an application for relief will be made, not least because, thus far, the administrators have declined to pay the March rents which would be, in any event, a condition of any relief from forfeiture and because there has been no indication from Baker, the buyer, or its solicitors that any application is contemplated or threatened."
The Landlord's submissions
(1) In the present case, just as Jervis, the grant of permission would not impede the purposes of the administration, and, accordingly, there is no reason to refuse the Landlord's application. In particular (a) there is reason to doubt that any substantial premium could be achieved by assignment of the Lease, (b) even if it could be achieved, it could fairly be described as providing a benefit for the secured creditor which is (i) a windfall for that creditor and (ii) de minimis, and accordingly not in any meaningful sense capable of promoting a statutory objective, in circumstances where the secured claim is £45 million and there is an expected deficit of about £11 million to the secured creditor.
(2) If, contrary to the above, a balancing exercise falls to be performed, the balance comes down firmly in favour of granting the relief sought by the application. On the one hand, if permission is refused, the Landlord will suffer financial loss by being denied the opportunity to grant a new lease of the Property at a higher rent to a new tenant which it regards as suitable and which can offer a good covenant, as well as in other ways identified by Mr Lazari. On the other hand, if permission is granted the Administrators have not identified any sufficient financial or other loss or prejudice that would result.
(3) The Administrators' conduct has involved an illegitimate use of the statutory moratorium, and this is a further factor in favour of granting permission. Although the Administrators may have been motivated by a desire to improve the position of the creditors of the Tenant (and SRL), the Landlord was plainly entitled to refuse consent to an assignment to STL, and they must have known since at latest February 2015 that there was no prospect of an assignment to STL. However, between February 2015 and 9 June 2015 they took no steps to terminate STL's unlawful occupation or to market the Property in order to find an acceptable assignee. Instead, right up to the initial hearing of the application, they were doing no more than embarking on a leisurely review of their options, which the Landlord believed they had been actively pursuing for months before that. Indeed, the Administrators have used the mechanism of the licence that they granted to STL (in deliberate breach of the terms of the Lease) as a means of extending the protection of the statutory moratorium to STL, in that if they had simply caused the Tenant to assign the Lease to STL, the statutory moratorium would not have protected STL and the Landlord would have been entitled to proceed immediately to forfeiture of the Lease.
(4) If and in so far as the Administrators might seek to argue that, if the court is minded to give permission, it should nevertheless limit this to permission to forfeit by legal proceedings rather than peaceable re-entry, so that the Tenant can cross-apply for relief from forfeiture, that argument should be rejected. Conditions should only be imposed if they would serve the purpose of the administration, and requiring the Landlord to commence forfeiture proceedings would not serve that purpose: (a) first, it would not disadvantage the Tenant to require it to commence separate proceedings seeking relief from forfeiture, as opposed to counterclaiming for relief in forfeiture proceedings; (b) second, the Administrators had not manifested any intention to apply for relief from forfeiture to date, and given the value of the Lease it would be surprising if they were now to take such steps – but to require them to take positive steps if they wished to seek relief would be appropriate in any event in light of their dilatoriness to date and the prejudice thereby occasioned to the Landlord; (c) third, an application for relief from forfeiture would be doomed to failure in any event. In this regard, while the court has a wide discretion whether to grant relief from forfeiture, when exercising that discretion the court will take into account the conduct and financial position of the tenant, the nature and gravity of any breach, and its relationship to the value of the property, and only in exceptional circumstances will the court grant relief against wilful or deliberate breaches of covenant. Reference was made to Hyman v Rose [1912] AC 623, Shiloh Spinners Ltd v Harding [1973] AC 691; Mascherpa v Direct Ltd [1960] 1 WLR 447, and Magnic Ltd v Ul-Hassain [2015] EWCA Civ 224, Patten LJ at [50]. It was submitted that (i) the Tenant was in serious and deliberate breach of covenant in allowing STL to occupy the Property for some 9 months, (ii) there is no prospect that the Tenant would be able to regularise the position by obtaining a declaration that the Landlord had unreasonably withheld consent to assign (see Scala House & District Property Co v Forbes [1974] QB 575), (iii) the Tenant remained insolvent and in administration, and (iv) the Landlord had been caused significant prejudice.
The Administrators' submissions
(1) It is clear that the purpose of the administration would be impeded by forfeiture. The applicable statutory objective of the Administrators is to achieve a better result for the Tenant's creditors as a whole than would be likely if the Tenant was wound up (without first being in administration). As appears from the Statement of Proposals, the Administrator's proposals in relation to the achievement of this statutory objective were all based upon their ability to realise various assets of the Tenant, including the leasehold asset represented by the Lease. Accordingly, the continued existence of the Lease has throughout been essential for the achievement of this statutory objective in that the leasehold interest represents a very valuable asset which the Administrators are able to realise for the benefit of the creditors. In particular, now that it has become apparent that the sale to STL cannot be achieved, the continued existence of the Lease is of critical importance to enable the Administrators to market the leasehold interest.(2) Therefore, and in contrast to the position which obtained in Jervis, it is appropriate for the Court to proceed to consider the balancing exercise referred to in Atlantic Computers. Further, the applicable factors point overwhelmingly to the conclusion that permission ought to be refused: (a) first, forfeiture of the Lease would result in a loss to the Tenant's creditors of a sum in the region of £650,000 – the fact that an offer of £600,000 has already been received demonstrates that the existing leasehold interest will command a very substantial premium on assignment, and the evidence regarding the proposed letting at a market rent by the Landlord only serves to confirm why the Lease, which is at a lower rent, should attract a substantial premium on assignment; (b) second, there has been no loss to the Landlord as a result of the administration or the temporary occupation of STL, because the Landlord has accepted full payment of the rent due pursuant to the Lease (it having been agreed that the Administrators will take no point on this issue in respect of waiver of a right to forfeit the Lease); (c) third, it is not correct that an unlawful occupier was imposed upon the Landlord, in that as soon as it became clear that negotiations between STL and the Landlord would not succeed, the Administrators and STL took steps to vacate the Property, and there has been no continuing breach after 16 June 2015; (d) fourth, the Landlord is seeking a complete windfall benefit as a result of the administration of the Tenant. Merely by virtue of the fact of the administration and the standard procedure of administrators arranging a pre-pack administration with a licence to occupy, the Landlord is seeking the massive commercial advantage of taking the Lease back early, some 16 years before it is due to expire. The Landlord has been motivated by this collateral purpose for its own financial advantage throughout, as evidenced most clearly by the fact that in refusing the applications for consent to assign it relied on a number of grounds which were manifestly unreasonable.
(3) As the negotiations between STL and the Landlord have only very recently come to an unsuccessful conclusion, it would only be fair at this stage to allow the Administrators the opportunity to market the leasehold interest in order to realise the benefit of the asset for the creditors in pursuance of their statutory objective.
(4) Even if the Landlord has a prospective new tenant for the Property which it stands to lose, that is not correctly characterised as "prejudice". Instead, any new lease represents a massive financial windfall which the Landlord is seeking to realise to the very substantial financial detriment of the creditors of the Tenant.
(5) In any event, the claim of "prejudice" lacks credibility. First, the Landlord has adduced no evidence regarding its marketing of the Property or regarding other interest shown in it. Second, the Landlord would not be able to proceed with the proposed third party tenant on the terms claimed to be insisted upon by the third party (including that the new lease is to be subject to an agreement for lease by 10 July 2015). This timescale completely overlooks the fact that even if the Landlord was to be granted permission to forfeit, the proceedings for possession would need to comply with the procedure and timescales set out in CPR 55.
(6) With regard to CPR 55, it is apparent from the fact that paragraphs 2 and 3 of the Application Notice include a claim for possession and an order for the payment of monetary sums that the Landlord is proposing to seek permission to forfeit by way of court proceedings. However, even if the Landlord succeeds on the hearing of the application for permission to forfeit, it cannot then proceed to seek any substantive order for possession and any orders for monetary payments. On the contrary, it has to seek permission and, if successful, it may then proceed to commence proceedings for forfeiture by virtue of the issue and service of a Particulars of Claim which set out the grounds of forfeiture relied upon and which can then be the subject of a proper Defence and an application for relief from forfeiture. This is the established procedure at common law to effect a forfeiture by proceedings. In any event, CPR 55.2 makes it clear that the procedure set out in Section 1 of Part 55 must be used where a landlord claims possession of land. Accordingly, the claims for relief sought in paragraphs 2 and 3 of the Application Notice are fundamentally misconceived and are liable to be dismissed. Even if the Landlord now sought to change its mind and to proceed instead by way of peaceable re-entry, this would not overcome the problem. The Tenant will immediately seek relief from forfeiture in the event that the Landlord is granted permission to forfeit (and injunctive relief if appropriate or necessary). The Tenant's application for relief from forfeiture is also subject to the same procedure and timescales under CPR 55.2(1)(c), and it would not be open to Landlord to seek to override the Tenant's rights in this regard.
(7) It is unlikely that the proposed letting could ever take place, given that relief from forfeiture would be likely to be granted and would result in the Lease being retrospectively reinstated: see Woodfall, Landlord and Tenant, paragraph 17.175. Relief would be very likely to be granted given that the consequences for the Tenant if relief from forfeiture was refused would be wholly disproportionate. The Tenant would lose the benefit of a valuable asset, which is of significant importance to the general body of creditors. By contrast, the Landlord would gain a considerable windfall. Further, the circumstances in which the alleged breach came about in this case were very different from those applicable on an ordinary breach of an alienation provision and would be viewed far less seriously by the court. The events of September 2014 of which the Landlord complains are now very much an accepted consequence of the type of "pre-pack" administration which is encouraged and endorsed as part of the new procedures for the administration of companies (pursuant to the amendments introduced to the IA by the Enterprise Act 2002). Thus, the Administrators had little choice in dealing with the matter in any other way.
(8) It is also to be noted that the Landlord acquired the Property after STL had entered into occupation and after the Administrators had already been appointed, about two months after the licence to occupy had been granted to STL and one month after the first application for consent to assign to STL had been submitted. There has been no change after acquisition to what the Landlord acquired.
(9) It is not right to say that the Administrators have delayed and that permission to forfeit should be granted for that reason. In pursuance of the statutory objective, they have properly and legitimately endeavoured to seek to complete an assignment to STL, given the particularly advantageous financial terms that would have resulted for the creditors from this disposal. At the same time as seeking to achieve this goal, the Administrators prepared for the marketing of the Property. It was not until 8 June 2015 that it became clear that further negotiations between STL and the Landlord would not succeed. They then immediately took steps to require STL to vacate the Property and they have since set about marketing it.
(10) The prohibition on legal process in this case would enable the Administrators to realise the substantial value represented by the leasehold interest in the Property, and would therefore clearly enable and assist in the achievement of the object of the administration. Further, it would not be inequitable for the prohibition to apply in this case. Quite the contrary: forfeiture would result in the loss of a valuable asset, which is of significant importance to the general body of creditors, while at the same time it would confer a very considerable windfall benefit on the Landlord. Accordingly, applying the guidance contained in Atlantic Computers, the Landlord's application for permission to forfeit should be refused.
Discussion
Conclusion