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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 >> Fivestar Properties Ltd, Re [2015] EWHC 2782 (Ch) (08 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/2782.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2782 (Ch), [2016] 1 P &CR DG11, [2016] WLR 1104, [2015] WLR(D) 416, [2016] 1 WLR 1104 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
In the matter of Fivestar Properties Ltd
and
In the matter of the Insolvency Act 1986
and
In the matter of the Companies Act 2006
____________________
West Bromwich Commercial Ltd, Re |
Applicant |
____________________
No other party appeared or was represented
Hearing date: 28 September 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ David Cooke:
The facts
Dissolution and disclaimer
"Moving from administration to dissolution
84(1) If the administrator of a company thinks that the company has no property which might permit a distribution to its creditors, he shall send a notice to that effect to the registrar of companies...
(4) On the registration of a notice in respect of a company under sub-paragraph (1) the appointment of an administrator of the company shall cease to have effect…
(6) At the end of the period of three months beginning with the date of registration of a notice in respect of a company under sub-paragraph (1) the company is deemed to be dissolved."
"[The] view … is expressed in Corporate Administrations and Rescue Procedures, 2004, Fletcher, Higham and Trower, page 418 … that the duty under para 84 will arise in two categories of case: (i) where it transpires that the company has no property available for distribution to creditors, and (ii) where the administrators have made distributions under para 65 and there is no further distribution to be made, whether through the medium of an administration or a liquidation."
But he did not expressly approve this statement, and referred to it for the purpose of contrast with the opinions of other authors concurring with Blackburne J. It seems to me, provisionally at least, that the purpose of the para 84 procedure is to enable the company to be efficiently put to rest when the creditors have no interest in it entering any other procedure (cf para 24 of the judgment of Rimer J) which will not be the case where further payments to creditors may be made out of any assets, whether at the time under the control of the administrator or not and whether the proceeds of realisations will go to unsecured or secured creditors.
"1012 Property of dissolved company to be bona vacantia
(1) When a company is dissolved, all property and rights whatsoever vested in … the company immediately before its dissolution … are deemed to be bona vacantia and—
(a) accordingly belong to the Crown… , and
(b) vest and may be dealt with in the same manner as other bona vacantia accruing to the Crown...
(2) Subsection (1) has effect subject to the possible restoration of the company to the register under Chapter 3 (see section 1034)."
"1013 Crown disclaimer of property vesting as bona vacantia
(1) Where property vests in the Crown under section 1012, the Crown's title to it under that section may be disclaimed by a notice signed by the Crown representative, that is to say the Treasury Solicitor...
(3) A notice of disclaimer must be executed within three years after—
(a) the date on which the fact that the property may have vested in the Crown under section 1012 first comes to the notice of the Crown representative...
(4) If an application in writing is made to the Crown representative by a person interested in the property requiring him to decide whether he will or will not disclaim, any notice of disclaimer must be executed within twelve months after the making of the application or such further period as may be allowed by the court.
(5) A notice of disclaimer under this section is of no effect if it is shown to have been executed after the end of the period specified by subsection (3) or (4).
(6) A notice of disclaimer under this section must be delivered to the registrar [of Companies] and retained and registered by him.
1014 Effect of Crown disclaimer
(1) Where notice of disclaimer is executed under section 1013 as respects any property, that property is deemed not to have vested in the Crown under section 1012.
(2) The following sections contain provisions as to the effect of the Crown disclaimer—
sections 1015 to 1019 apply in relation to property in England and Wales…
1015 General effect of disclaimer
(1) The Crown's disclaimer operates so as to terminate, as from the date of the disclaimer, the rights, interests and liabilities of the company in or in respect of the property disclaimed.
(2) It does not, except so far as is necessary for the purpose of releasing the company from any liability, affect the rights or liabilities of any other person.
1017 Power of court to make vesting order
(1) The court may on application by a person who—
(a) claims an interest in the disclaimed property…
make an order under this section in respect of the property.
(2) An order under this section is an order for the vesting of the disclaimed property in…
(a) a person entitled to it …
(4) An order under this section may be made on such terms as the court thinks fit.
(5) On a vesting order being made under this section, the property comprised in it vests in the person named in that behalf in the order without conveyance, assignment or transfer."
Effect of Crown disclaimer on the freehold
i) further held that the escheat operated automatically without need for any election by the Crown (p804G),
ii) noted the power of the Crown to disclaim bona vacantia vesting in it on disclaimer (then contained in s 654 Companies Act 1985) and the curious result in the case of freeholds that such a disclaimer the land ultimately came back to the Crown in any event as an escheat (p805G). The disclaimer may nevertheless serve a purpose for the Crown in that it may not come under liability as owner of the land unless it takes some step to assert ownership; see Megarry & Wade Law of Real Property, Eighth Ed, para 2.024,
iii) held that, notwithstanding the apparent illogicality, the termination of the freehold interest did not operate to determine subordinate interests created out of it, in particular those of a mortgagee and leasehold tenants (p808(B)), and
iv) held that a conveyance of the freehold by the mortgagee after the disclaimer was effective to vest an unimpeachable freehold title in the purchaser, whether or not the mortgagee's power of sale had arisen before the disclaimer (p810H).
Power to restore and effect of restoration
"1029 Application to court for restoration to the register
(1) An application may be made to the court to restore to the register a company—
(a) that has been dissolved under Chapter 9 of Part 4 of the Insolvency Act 1986 … (dissolution of company after winding up),
(b) that is deemed to have been dissolved under paragraph 84(6) of Schedule B1 to that Act … (dissolution of company following administration), or
(c) that has been struck off the register—
(i) under section 1000 or 1001 (power of registrar to strike off defunct company), or
(ii) under section 1003 (voluntary striking off),
whether or not the company has in consequence been dissolved.
(2) An application under this section may be made by— …
(c) any person having an interest in land in which the company had a superior or derivative interest,
(e) any person who but for the company's dissolution would have been in a contractual relationship with it,
(i) any person who was a creditor of the company at the time of its striking off or dissolution…
or by any other person appearing to the court to have an interest in the matter.
1031 Decision on application for restoration by the court
(1) On an application under section 1029 the court may order the restoration of the company to the register—
(a) if the company was struck off the register under section 1000 or 1001 (power of registrar to strike off defunct companies) and the company was, at the time of the striking off, carrying on business or in operation;
(b) if the company was struck off the register under section 1003 (voluntary striking off) and any of the requirements of sections 1004 to 1009 was not complied with;
(c) if in any other case the court considers it just to do so…
1032 Effect of court order for restoration to the register
(1) The general effect of an order by the court for restoration to the register is that the company is deemed to have continued in existence as if it had not been dissolved or struck off the register…
(3) The court may give such directions and make such provision as seems just for placing the company and all other persons in the same position (as nearly as may be) as if the company had not been dissolved or struck off the register.
(4) The court may also give directions as to…
(c) where any property or right previously vested in or held on trust for the company has vested as bona vacantia, the payment of the costs … of the Crown representative—
(i) in dealing with the property during the period of dissolution..
1034 Effect of restoration to the register where property has vested as bona vacantia
(1) The person in whom any property … is vested by section 1012 (property of dissolved company to be bona vacantia) may dispose of, or of an interest in, that property … despite the fact that the company may be restored to the register under this Chapter.
(2) If the company is restored to the register—
(a) the restoration does not affect the disposition (but without prejudice to its effect in relation to any other property or right previously vested in or held on trust for the company), and
(b) the Crown … shall pay to the company an amount equal to—
(i) the amount of any consideration received for the property …
or, if no consideration was received an amount equal to the value of the property… disposed of, as at the date of the disposition."
"The answer to the central issue: 'Is a Crown disclaimer a disposition for the purposes of s 655 [Companies Act 1985]?' must, in my judgment, be No. I accept the arguments advanced by Allied [the lessor] and Pneumatic [the original tenant] which I have summarised earlier. In my view, both the natural meaning of the words used and the policy of Ch VI of Pt XXI of the 1985 Act point to an 'as you were' situation once the company is restored to the register, subject to the court's power to 'tidy up' under ss 653(3) and 655."
Conclusion
i) The most obvious would be that if assets remain to be realised after administration and are expected to produce value for creditors the company should not be put into dissolution (even if it is technically proper to do so, which I doubt for the reasons given above). The administrators could petition for compulsory winding up or, subject to the hurdles in para 83 of Sch B1, serve notice to put it into creditors' voluntary winding up. If the only remaining assets are under the control of receivers who will remain in office, the administrators could apply to the court to end the administration without moving to any other procedure, leaving the company in due course to be struck off as defunct if no other demise is initiated by its directors, members or creditors.
ii) Since the disclaimer of the freehold does not determine subordinate interests created out of it (see Scmlla, above) a mortgagee's powers would appear to be exercisable notwithstanding the dissolution and disclaimer and, for instance, sufficient to vest a secure freehold title in a purchaser from it. The position in a case like the present may be more complex if, for instance, the negotiation or grant of a new lease required the mortgagee or receivers appointed by a mortgagee to act as agent of the company when they could not do so after its dissolution.
iii) An application might be made for an order vesting the freehold in a purchaser from a mortgagee under Companies Act 2006 s 1017, perhaps by way of confirmation. There may be a difficulty if such an order is sought in favour of the mortgagee himself (even if willing to become owner) as he may not be "a person entitled to it" for the purposes of s1017(2), though it seems to me the contrary is arguable since subsection (1) permits an application by a person who "claims an interest in" the property, which presumably might be an interest less than full ownership.
iv) In Quadracolour Ltd v Crown Estate Commissioners [2013] EWHC 4842 (Ch) Jeremy Cousins QC sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge made an order vesting a freehold title, extinguished by Crown disclaimer as in this case, in the holder of an option to acquire it, exercising the power in s 181 Law of Property Act 1925 to create and vest an estate corresponding to that which had been determined "in the person who would have been entitled to the estate which determined had it remained a subsisting estate". He held that the option holder would have been so entitled because but for the dissolution of the company it would have followed the steps required to exercise its option. A mortgagee would not of course be entitled to the estate mortgaged (except on forfeiture) but a purchaser from him would be.