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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 >> Premier Motor Auctions Ltd, Re [2015] EWHC 3568 (Ch) (11 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3568.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3568 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
IN THE MATTER OF PREMIER MOTOR AUCTIONS LEEDS LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF PREMIER MOTOR AUCTIONS LIMITED
(both in liquidation)
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Application by : MARTIN JOHN ATKINS and FREDDY KHALASTCHI (Joint Liquidators of the above Companies) |
Applicants |
____________________
Hearing date: 3 December 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Judge Behrens :
1 Background
2 This application
"if and insofar as rule 4.218 of the rules is applicable, then pursuant to rule 4.218E(2)(a) the litigation expenses in [the Proceedings] are approved and authorised by the Court"
3 Evidence
a. Information and documentation in the Application and witness statement is confidential and potentially privileged
b. The bank cannot possibly express an impartial view and could use this as a self serving means of frustrating the Proceedings
c. Due to the conditional nature of the costs and expenses incurred and the lack of sufficient other assets available, this issue only arises in circumstances where the Proceedings have been successful against Lloyds
Due to the confidential nature of disclosures made in this witness statement … it would be inappropriate for the information contained in the witness statement to be in the public domain.
4 The Law
176ZA Payment of expenses of winding up (England and Wales)176ZA(1) The expenses of winding up in England and Wales, so far as the assets of the company available for payment of general creditors are insufficient to meet them, have priority over any claims to property comprised in or subject to any floating charge created by the company and shall be paid out of any such property accordingly.176ZA(2) In subsection (1)–(a) the reference to assets of the company available for payment of general creditors does not include any amount made available under section 176A(2)(a);(b)the reference to claims to property comprised in or subject to a floating charge is to the claims of–(i) the holders of debentures secured by, or holders of, the floating charge, and(ii) any preferential creditors entitled to be paid out of that property in priority to them.176ZA(3) Provision may be made by rules restricting the application of subsection (1), in such circumstances as may be prescribed, to expenses authorised or approved–(a) by the holders of debentures secured by, or holders of, the floating charge and by any preferential creditors entitled to be paid in priority to them, or(b) by the court.176ZA(4) References in this section to the expenses of the winding up are to all expenses properly incurred in the winding up, including the remuneration of the liquidator.
(a) "approval" and "authorisation" respectively mean:(i) where yet to be incurred, the approval, and(ii) where already incurred, the authorisation,of expenses specified in section 176ZA(3);(b) "the creditor" means—
(i) a preferential creditor of the company, or(ii) a holder of a debenture secured by, or a holder of, a floating charge created by the company;(c) "legal proceedings" means—
(i) …(ii) legal actions and proceedings, arbitration or any other dispute resolution procedures which a liquidator has power to bring or defend in the name of the company, and(iii) negotiations intended to lead or leading to a settlement or compromise of any action, proceeding or procedure to which subparagraphs (i) or (ii) relate;(d) "litigation expenses" means
expenses of a liquidation which—
(i) are properly chargeable or incurred in the preparation or conduct of any legal proceedings, and(ii) as expenses in the liquidation, exceed, or in the opinion of the liquidator are likely to exceed (and only in so far as they exceed or are likely to exceed), in the aggregate £5000.
Litigation expenses shall not have the priority provided by section 176ZA over any claims to property comprised in or subject to a floating charge created by the company and shall not be paid out of any such property unless and until approved or authorised in accordance with rules 4.218B to 4.218E.
Subject to Rules 4.218C to 4.218E, paragraphs (2) and (3) or (4) apply where, in the course of winding up a company, the liquidator–
(a) ascertains that property is comprised in or subject to a floating charge;(b) has himself instituted or proposes to institute or continue legal proceedings or is in the process of defending or proposes to defend any legal proceeding brought or likely to be brought against the company; and(c) prior to or at any stage in those proceedings, is of the opinion that–(i) the assets of the company available for payment of general creditors are or will be insufficient to pay litigation expenses; and(ii) in order to pay litigation expenses he will have to have recourse to property comprised in or subject to a floating charge created by the company.
- He must first identify the creditor or creditors with a claim to property subject to the floating charge [r 4.218B(2)]. In this case there is only one creditor - Lloyds.
- He must seek from that creditor approval or authorisation for such sum as he thinks fit [r 4.218B(3)]. There is provision for the liquidator to make further requests [r 4.218B(5)].
- The request must contain the information specified in r 4.218C. The information includes a statement of the brief nature of the proceedings and the grounds upon which the liquidator relies. It also notifies the creditor of a 28 day time limit to reply and must specify the amount of litigation expenses for which approval is sought. There is provision which enables the creditor to seek reasonable further particulars of the information supplied.
- It is to be noted that under r 4.218C(2) express provision is made in respect of information, the disclosure of which would be seriously prejudicial to the winding up of the Company:
Where anything in paragraph (1) requires the inclusion of any information, the disclosure of which could be seriously prejudicial to the winding up of the company, the liquidator may–
(a) exclude such information from any of the above, provided that it is accompanied by a statement to that effect; or(b) include it on terms–
(i) that bind the creditor to keep the information confidential, and(ii) that include an undertaking on the part of the liquidator to apply to the court for an order that so much of the information as may be kept in the files of the court, not be open to public inspection.- Rule 4.218D deals with situations where the Liquidator fails to supply the specified information or where approval or authorisation is taken to have been granted.
4.218E Litigation expenses and property subject to a floating charge—application to court by the liquidator4.218E(1) In the circumstances specified below the court may, upon the application of the liquidator, approve or authorise such amount of litigation expenses as it thinks just.
4.218E(2) Save as provided by paragraph (3), application to the court by a liquidator for an order approving or authorising an amount for litigation expenses may only be made where–
(a) the specified creditor (or, if more than one, any one of them) is or is intended to be a defendant in the legal proceedings in respect of which the litigation expenses have been or are to be incurred; or(b) the specified creditor has been requested to approve or authorise the amount specified under Rule 4.218C(1)(c) and has, in any case–(i) declined to approve or authorise, as the case may be, the specified amount; or(ii) has approved or authorised an amount which is less than the specified amount and which lesser amount the liquidator considers insufficient, or(iii) made such application for further particulars or other response to the liquidator's request as is, in the liquidator's opinion, unreasonable.4.218E(3) Where the liquidator is of the view that circumstances are such that he requires urgent approval or authorisation of litigation expenses, he may apply to the court for approval or authorisation either–
(a) without seeking approval or authorisation from the specified creditor; or(b) if sought, prior to the expiry of the specified time limit.4.218E(4) The court may grant such application for approval or authorisation–
(a) provided that the liquidator satisfies it of the urgency of the case, and(b) subject to such terms and conditions as it thinks just.4.218E(5) The liquidator shall, at the same time as making any application to the court under this rule, send copies of it to the specified creditor or creditors, unless the court orders otherwise.
4.218E(6) The specified creditor (including any one or all of them where there are two or more such creditors) is entitled to be heard on any such application unless the court orders otherwise.
4.218E(7) The court may grant approval or authorisation subject to such terms and conditions as it may think just, including terms and conditions relating to the amount or nature of the litigation expenses and as to any obligation to make further applications to the court under this Rule.
4.218E(8) The costs of the liquidator's application under this Rule, including the costs of any specified creditor appearing or represented on it, shall be an expense of the liquidation unless the court orders otherwise.
5 Discussion
… the present application only becomes relevant if and to the extent that: (i) the Claim is successful, in that Lloyds and/or PWC are ordered to pay a sum of money to the Companies; (ii) Lloyds successfully establishes that those monies are caught by the Debentures; (iii) the litigation expenses exceed the sum paid to the Liquidators by Lloyds and/or PWC in respect of the Companies' costs; and (iv) the assets available for the general body of creditors (i.e. any sum recovered from Lloyds and/ or PWC in excess of the sum secured by the Debentures) are insufficient to meet any unpaid litigation expenses.
Service on Lloyds
"In the determination of his civil rights and obligation … everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law. Judgment shall be pronounced publicly but the press and public may be excluded from all or part of the trial in the interest
First, there appears to have been no reason why the application for an injunction should have been made ex parte, or at any rate, without some notice to the bank. Although the matter is in the end one for the discretion of the judge, audi alterem partem is a salutary and important principle. Their Lordships therefore consider that a judge should not entertain an application of which no notice has been given unless either giving notice would enable the defendant to take steps to defeat the purpose of the injunction (as in the case of a Mareva or Anton Piller order) or there has been literally no time to give notice before the injunction is required to prevent the threatened wrongful act. These two alternative conditions are reflected in rule 17.4(4) of the Supreme Court of Jamaica Civil Procedure Rules 2002. Their Lordships would expect cases in the latter category to be rare, because even in cases in which there was no time to give the period of notice required by the rules, there will usually be no reason why the applicant should not have given shorter notice or even made a telephone call. Any notice is better than none.
Publicity
CPR 39 provdes
(1) The general rule is that a hearing is to be in public.(2) The requirement for a hearing to be in public does not require the court to make special arrangements for accommodating members of the public.
(3) A hearing, or any part of it, may be in private if—
(a) …;(b) …(c) it involves confidential information (including information relating to personal financial matters) and publicity would damage that confidentiality;(d) …(e) …(f) … or(g) the court considers this to be necessary, in the interests of justice.
Hearings in private under r.39.2(3) are derogations from the principle of open justice and must be ordered only when it is necessary and proportionate to do so, with a view to protecting the rights which claimants (and others) are entitled to have protected by such means. When such orders are made they must be limited in scope to what is required in the particular circumstances of the case (G v Wikimedia Foundation Inc [2009] EWHC 3148 (QB), December 2, 2009, unrep. (Tugendhat J.)).In V v T [2014] EWHC 3432 (Ch) Morgan J, referring to Practice Guidance: Interim Non-Disclosure Orders [2012] 1 W.L.R. 1003 (para.B13-001 below) noted that derogations from the fundamental principle of open justice can only be justified in exceptional circumstances when they are strictly necessary to secure the proper administration of justice. The extent of any derogation should be no more than is strictly necessary to achieve the desired purpose. The Judge distilled the following general propositions from the authorities: (1) there are two dimensions to open justice. The first is that the public are entitled to attend court proceedings to see what is going on. The second dimension is the right of the media to report court proceedings to the public (2) the hearing of cases in open court deters inappropriate behaviour by the court. It maintains public confidence in the administration of justice (3) court hearings taking place in public enable information to become available to the public in a democracy (4) the fact that a hearing in open court may be painful, humiliating and a deterrent either to a party or to a witness is not normally a proper basis for departing the open justice principle. The judge declined to hear an application for the variation of trusts concerning unborn and minor beneficiaries in private, being satisfied that their interests would be sufficiently protected by the imposition of reporting restrictions, anonymising the judgment and by making orders under CPR rr.5.4C and 5.4D ensuring that non parties would require permission to obtain certain court documents.