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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 >> Golstein v Bishop & Anor [2016] EWHC 2804 (Ch) (07 November 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/2804.html Cite as: [2017] BPIR 51, [2016] EWHC 2804 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
IN THE MATTER OF COLIN MICHAEL ARTHUR BISHOP
AND THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
The Rolls Building 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
JOSEPH GOLSTEIN |
Applicant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) COLIN MICHAEL ARTHUR BISHOP (2) NICHOLAS BARNETT |
Respondents |
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Richard Ascroft (instructed by YVA Solicitors LLP) for the First Respondent
Steven Fennell (instructed by Locke Lord (UK) LLP for the Second Respondent
Hearing date: 3 November 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warren :
Introduction
Section 262 Insolvency Act 1986
Issue for this hearing
i) Mr Bishop contends that the substantial delay in the resolution of the section 262 application is such that Mr Golstein can no longer obtain relief, particularly because, according to him, Mr Golstein bears significant responsibility for the delay. Mr Golstein disputes the factual basis for the submission, namely that he is responsible for any delay, and submits that in the absence of unreasonable conduct on his own part, delay, in the present case, carries no weight.ii) Mr Bishop contends that it is now impossible to revert to the status quo prior to the IVA, the desirability of which is something which Mr Ascroft submits is impliedly recognised in section 262(7). This is a factor to be taken into account in the exercise of my discretion. I do not understand Mr Salis to dispute that this is a factor to be taken into account but, in the present case, it carries little, if any, weight.
iii) As a particular aspect of reversion to the status quo, Mr Ascroft submits that Mr Golstein's conduct has resulted not only in delay in the resolution of the section 262 application but also in the incurring of significant unnecessary costs by Mr Barnett to the detriment of creditors. At one point, it even appeared that Mr Bishop was saying that the bulk of the realisations of the IVA assets have been spent on such costs. Mr Golstein's position is that he has not been responsible for Mr Barnett incurring unnecessary costs. Far from it, it is only his interventions which resulted in Mr Barnett obtaining information which eventually led to the Notice of Breach.
iv) Mr Bishop contends that he changed his position in reliance on the validity of the IVA. Mr Golstein does not accept that there has been any relevant change of position and certainly none involving any prejudice to Mr Bishop.
Delay
"In the light of the number of issues in dispute and the volume of evidence serviced and filed by the parties in respect of both applications [Mr Golstein's application and CBL's application, also under section 262, which DJ Hart upheld: [see [89] of my main judgment], Leading Counsel considers that the current listing of a half day is no longer sufficient.
Further, the bankruptcy proceedings arose from an unpaid interim costs order in our client's claim against Mr Bishop under the Partnership Act which is due to be heard in the High Court and is listed in a trial window in the final week of October 2012. In determining our client's current application, one of the issues which the County Court will be invited to determine will involve assessing whether the supervisor under the IVA was justified in awarding our clients voting rights of only £1 in respect of one of the contingent debts in dispute in the High Court proceedings. We consider it will be an inefficient use of court time to reach a determination on this point, given that the High Court trial is imminent and the merits of our client's claim and Mr Bishop's counterclaim will be properly determined by the High Court.
We therefore respectfully suggest that the current listing should accordingly be vacated and the hearing relisted for a full day after judgment has been handed down in the High Court trial."
The time estimate for the trial was 5 days. In the end, the hearing before Mr Nugee QC took 6 days.
"Unfortunately the enclosed Order means that the Application Hearing will not go ahead until sometime next year. In the circumstances I doubt that it is worthwhile making an Application to set aside or vary the enclosed Order and there is the risk that you will be subject to an adverse Costs Order if your application fails."
i) First, Mr Bishop did not avail himself of the liberty to apply contained in DJ Smart's order. That may have been because his solicitor perceived his chances of varying that order as remote: see the passage from Ms Nigh's letter quoted at paragraph 11 above. Her advice would appear to have been vindicated by the decision of Newey J after argument on essentially the same matter. Newey J's decision suggests to me that Mr Golstein's approach, whilst having the advantage for him identified by Mr Ascroft, was in fact the most appropriate way, objectively, of case-managing the two separate sets of proceedings.ii) Secondly, Mr Bishop complains that Mr Golstein did not re-list the section 262 application immediately following Mr Nugee QC's judgment. He was not unreasonable, in my view, in failing to do so since, on one view, the judgment anticipated by DJ Smart's order was for a sum of money at the end of the day. But even if that is a wrong reading of the order, Mr Golstein was expecting a swift resolution of the quantum issue and cannot be seriously criticised for failing to re-list the section 262 application. But all this is beside the point. It was open to Mr Bishop himself to get the section 262 application relisted after Mr Nugee QC's judgment if he had thought that the matter was urgent or that he would suffer prejudice. It is no answer to say that the onus was on Mr Golstein to list the application and that he must take the consequences of a failure to do so. Under the CPR (which, so far as relevant to this point, apply to insolvency proceedings), all parties have a responsibility to assist the court to further the overriding objective: see CPR 1.3. A party cannot simply sit back and allow proceedings to stall and then complain that the other party should have taken a step which it was open to the complaining party himself to have taken.
iii) Thirdly, the IVA proposal and the IVA itself expressly provide that the partnership proceedings are to continue. Usually, the effect of an IVA is that all existing proceedings are stayed. But this was not so with the partnership proceedings and for the good reason that those proceedings in the High Court were appropriate, and in an appropriate forum, for the resolution of matters which would have to be litigated somewhere.
iv) Fourthly, Mr Golstein's claim (as eventually established) was large. It has a very significant effect on the dividend which creditors could expect. The anticipated outcome was 38p in the £. But if Mr Golstein's claims were established, the dividend shrinks to less than 8p in the £. This is clearly a matter of significance and, other things being equal, it would have been in the interests of creditors for the actual position to have been established before the hearing of the section 262 application than after it.
v) It is relevant to consider the responsibility for the delay in the progress of the account and inquiry. Mr Bishop sought a rather longer time (6 months) than Mr Nugee QC granted (3 months) for procedural aspects of the taking of the accounts. Responses were filed in time, but Mr Bishop failed to provide proper disclosure. There were also delays in the provision by Mr Bishop of a password to the practice computer. These failures and delays clearly resulted in delay in dealing with the taking of the account.
Prejudice; impossibility of reversion to status quo; wasted expenditure
Miscellaneous factors
i) The first relates to transactions with CBL which Mr Bishop failed adequately to explain to Mr Barnett before the Notice of Breach was given. The position concerning CBL is of some significance because the small margin by which the IVA would have failed on the figures in my main judgment is only small because of the CBL debt. Mr Barnett has doubts as to whether the debt was really due as appears from his witness statement before DJ Hart, and no explanation has been forthcoming.ii) The second matter is this. In his IVA proposal dated 20 April 2012, Mr Bishop stated that he was confident that he would succeed in the partnership action: "I am confident of my position" as he put in in paragraph 47. Mr Bishop has now exhibited to his recent witness statement some correspondence. Included is a letter which he and his wife wrote to Ms Nigh (whom they no longer instruct) on 14 December 2012. It is written largely in response to a letter from Ms Nigh dated 21 November 2012 which has not been exhibited, so it is not possible for me to be sure precisely what Mr and Mrs Bishop's letter is addressing. The letter includes the following:
"With regard to the third paragraph of your letter of 21 November, CB has never consistently maintained that he had a good arguable defence to Golstein's claims. Perhaps you can show where he has done so if you do not accept what we say. Please refer to your attendance note of 30 August in which it is stated that it was clear that CB does not want to go to trial……"
Effects of no order and of revocation
Conclusion
Form of order