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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 >> Mowbray v Sanders & Anor [2015] EWHC 296 (Ch) (13 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/296.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 296 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN BANKRUPTCY
ON APPEAL FROM CHELMSFORD COUNTY COURT
IN THE MATTER OF JULIE ANN MOWBRAY (A BANKRUPT)
BANKRUPTCY NO. 188 OF 2011
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
JULIE ANN MOWBRAY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MICHAEL COLIN JOHN SANDERS (Trustee in Bankruptcy of the Estate of Julie Ann Mowbray) (2) 1ST CREDIT (FINANCE) LIMITED |
Respondents |
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Adam Chichester-Clark (instructed by Moorhead James LLP) for the First Respondent
Richard Roberts (instructed by Lester Aldridge LLP) for the Second Respondent
Hearing date: 10 June 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Hildyard :
Nature of this appeal
Factual background
“"Dtr cld…tried to make out that I haven’'t got a clue what I was on about – said she was dealing with Lloyds herself – told me to get on to Connaught Collections – informed her that we are Connaught Collections. Told her to send proof that shes dealing with Lloyds.”"
“"Dbtr clld in Claims recvd stat demand claims part of this was for bnk charges. Claims did try sorting this out with the bnk in 2006 and then claims mvd. Advsd debtr stat demand still stands. Dbtr asked for advice advsd to cntct CAB.”"
The bankruptcy petition and hearing
“"was aware of the arguments being put forward by the [Appellant] to oppose the making of the bankruptcy order i.e. that there was no debt owing and that if there was a debt it was statute barred and considered these arguments before making the bankruptcy order on 10th April, 2012. The applicant was present when the bankruptcy order was made and able to make representations and refer the judge to her documentary evidence which she had filed.”"
Annulment application to the Deputy District Judge
“"I write in response to your telephone call of today’'s date in connection with the above referenced account.
The cheque for £20.00 was paid to scotcall Limited [sic] on 21/9/2007. We do not retain information as requested for cheque number and bank details.
I trust this is of assistance to you.”"
“"I DID NOT make any payment towards this debt.”"
“"(1) The court may annul a bankruptcy order if it at any time appears to the court—
(a) that, on any grounds existing at the time the order was made, the order ought not to have been made … ”"
The Deputy District Judge’'s reasons for refusing annulment
(1) She did not accept the Appellant’'s first line of defence. As previously noted, she found it hard to accept that the Appellant genuinely believed at the time that the bank had received and acted on an instruction to close her account, dishonour the cheques she had written and extend her no further facilities. She noted that the Appellant had not asked the bank to return to her the dishonoured cheques; nor had the Appellant been contacted by any of the payees (who, on the Appellant’'s version of events, had been left with bounced cheques and unpaid) for further payment.
(2) She did not accept that the Appellant first came to know of the judgment against her and the statutory demand thereafter served on her until August 2011. She noted various inconsistencies in the Appellant’'s evidence in this context, including the Appellant’'s own earlier evidence that she was first notified of the judgment in default in May 2011, and the call from the Appellant recorded on the Creditsolve print-out as having been made in December 2006. She concluded that even though correspondence may have been sent to her previous address, the Appellant must have been receiving correspondence, since it must have been that which triggered her call to CCUK.
(3) More generally, the Deputy District Judge found the Appellant’'s “"recollection inaccurate”", and she did not accept the Appellant’'s evidence that she (the Appellant) had not made the random payment of £20 relied on by the Second Respondent. The Deputy District Judge considered that she had no reason to question the authenticity of a print-out from a ledger maintained by the Second Respondent recording such a payment, together with the Appellant’'s name and address and the aggregate amount of the debt. She found as a fact that the Appellant did make the payment of £20 towards the debt on 21 September 2007 and that this did extend the limitation period.
(4) As to the delays and substantial costs of the bankruptcy, and the Appellant’'s previous conduct, the Deputy District Judge found that the Appellant (a) had never sought to set aside the statutory demand, although she had tried (unsuccessfully because of procedural errors) to set aside the default judgment; (b) had not initially co-operated with the Trustee in Bankruptcy, had then delayed matters and increased their costs by asking them to challenge her father’'s will (in which he made no provision for her, citing “"difficulties”" in their relationship); (c) had already previously raised the two grounds on which she sought annulment at the hearing of the bankruptcy petition (at which she had been present); and (d) was not, at the time the bankruptcy order was made, in a position to pay her debts.
(5) In such circumstances, the Deputy District Judge held that (a) the debt on which the bankruptcy petition was founded was valid and still enforceable; (b) the judgment obtained was regular and valid; (c) the bankruptcy order was correctly made; (d) there were no exceptional circumstances such as might merit the matter being re-litigated; and (e) the First Respondent as Trustee in Bankruptcy was in no way at fault and should be entitled to his reasonable costs and expenses.
(6) If, however, she was “"wrong about the validity of the [petition] debt”", it was still in the discretion of the court whether or not to annul the bankruptcy order; and in this case, it would not be right to annul, since (a) no exceptional circumstances to justify re-litigating points made at the hearing of the bankruptcy petition had been demonstrated, and in any event (b) the Appellant could not clear her debts nor pay her share of the First Respondent’'s costs acting as her Trustee in Bankruptcy (then some £64,952), so that it would be a “"nonsense”" to annul the order, since a petition could then be presented for either (or both) the outstanding debts and the costs.
The nature of the annulment power
“"Where an application is made to the original tribunal to review, rescind or vary an order of its own…the question is not whether the original order ought to have been made upon the material then before it but whether that order ought to remain in force in the light either of changed circumstances or in the light of fresh evidence, whether or not it might have been obtained at the time of the original hearing.”"
“"Although there are references in these cases to what are described as exceptional circumstances, the essential point that emerges…is that if nothing has changed in the nature of the material before the court on the annulment or rescission application, then the court will not entertain it. The proper course in these circumstances is for the bankrupt to have appealed the original order. But if the court, on a consideration of the application, is satisfied that it has been presented with new material, which was not before the judge who made the bankruptcy order, and perhaps was not even available at that time, then in my judgment, the court is entitled to exercise its discretion and in appropriate cases, to decide to entertain the application and review the earlier decision.”"
“"The availability of new evidence may justify the review of that earlier decision if it is material which, in the judgment of the court hearing the application, is likely to have led the judge at the earlier hearing to reach a different conclusion. The realities are that if the judge hearing the application for annulment or rescission reaches that view, it will only be because he has been presented with material sufficiently new and different in nature as to cause him to reach that conclusion. In a sense, the probative effect of the new material is likely, in practice, to determine whether the application in discretionary terms is justified.”"
Nature of an appeal from a refusal to annul
The Deputy District Judge’'s approach
“"authority for the fact that a court has jurisdiction to go behind a default judgment and inquire whether there really was a debt. If it could be demonstrated by evidence subsequent to the bankruptcy order that the debt upon which the petition was founded did not exist, then it would be sufficient ground within the meaning of section 282(1)(a). The onus is on the debtor to prove that the debt did not exist.”"
“"authority for the fact that a debtor cannot re-argue the grounds on which he has unsuccessfully sought to have a statutory demand set aside on the presentation of a bankruptcy petition unless there has been a change of circumstances such as new legislation which would make the debt unenforceable.”"
“"authority for the fact that if the bankrupt has grounds which would have been an effective answer to the petition and which have not been adjudicated on he is free to raise them on an annulment application.”"
Were there “"exceptional circumstances”" warranting review of the debt’'s validity?
The new evidence
Was the Deputy District Judge in error in concluding that the petition debt was valid?
(3) Discretion
(1) the ramifications of my conclusion (contrary to that of the Deputy District Judge) that there was and is a genuine dispute about the validity (or, perhaps more accurately, enforceability) of the petition debt;
(2) the position in relation to the Appellant’'s unsecured creditors; and
(3) what properly are, and who should pay, the costs and expenses of the First Respondent?
Discretion: sub-issue (1)
Sub-issue (2): The position in relation to the Appellant’'s unsecured creditors
Sub-issue (3): what properly are, and who should pay, the costs and expenses of the bankruptcy?
“"aware of this sorry state of affairs and…apparently run up wholly disproportionate costs and expenses in the face of [the Appellant’'s] objections.”"
(1) the Appellant’'s failure to set the default judgment aside, and her failure also to liaise with the Second Respondent (it being the Deputy District Judge’'s tentative view that such liaison might have prevented the matter “"snowballing”");
(2) the Appellant’'s failure to apply to set aside the statutory demand (so possibly missing another chance of compromise);
(3) the Appellant’'s failure to co-operate with the First Respondent as her Trustee in Bankruptcy; and
(4) the Appellant’'s conduct in “"making this application to annul the bankruptcy order”" (though it seems from paragraph 51 of her judgment that the Deputy District Judge invited further submissions on the costs of the annulment application itself).
Quantification of proper bankruptcy costs and expenses
Disposition of this appeal