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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 >> Pickard & Anor v Constable [2017] EWHC 2475 (Ch) (06 October 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/2475.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2475 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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MARTIN PICKARD & ANN NILSSON as Joint Trustees in Bankruptcy of Pauline Constable |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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DEREK CONSTABLE |
Respondent |
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MS MATTSSON (instructed by MARTIN SEARLE SOLICITORS) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 3 OCTOBER
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Crown Copyright ©
Background
The evidence
a. At the time of his witness statement he was 63, so he is now either 63 or 64.
b. He was diagnosed with myasthenia gravis in 2009. This is an autoimmune condition which affects his muscles causing him to be weak and tired and affects his breathing.
c. Since his diagnosis, he has had two prolonged hospital admissions in late 2009 and early 2010, as well as shorter admissions when his breathing became bad. On one occasion, he was visited by his gp who, as Mr Constable states "remarked that it was the worst case of myasthenia gravis that he had seen in 25 years". I note that there is no evidence from the gp himself; nor is there any evidence of what other cases the gp had ever come across.
d. He takes a number of medicines including prednisolone. The dosage has changed over time. At one time he was taking 100 mg per day but that was lowered to 15 mg at some stage. At the end of September 2016 it was increased by 5 mg every 2 weeks as his condition had worsened. There is no evidence about what the dosage now is. Nor is there any evidence about the nature of this drug or what its effects and side effects might be.
e. He uses a Bilevel positive airway pressure (BIPAP) ventilator (to which he is attached by a mask) during the night and for 3 to 4 hours during the day to assist with his breathing.
f. He has to sleep sitting up as he is likely to choke if he lies down. He sleeps in an armchair in the living room of the Property, his sleep often being disturbed.
g. He spends virtually all day in the armchair. When he stands up he is shaky and at risk of falling. Walking sets off breathing attacks. He uses a wheelchair and occasionally a Zimmer frame if moving around the house. If he leaves the house he requires a wheelchair and his carer to assist him with getting in and out of the wheelchair and to push him around.
h. He uses a commode and a pot. Using the commode takes a long time because of muscle weakness and breathlessness. Accordingly, he always has a pot nearby which he uses more often. He drinks as little as possible because of his bladder problems.
i. Because of his breathlessness, be changes his clothes only once a week. It takes him 25 minutes to do so. Completion of the installation of a wet room (with the aid of local authority grant) took place in 2016. However, he has not been able to use it because he is so uneasy on his feet. He cannot remember the last time he showered or bathed.
j. He has a carer (Miss Pickles) who attends the Property 5 times a week spending about 12 hours per week. She divides her time between Mr Constable and his wife. She attends their daily needs.
k. He has a poor appetite and eats child-sized portions which he is not always able to finish. He has to be careful swallowing since, if food goes down the wrong way, his throat can go into spasm and his condition then stops his breathing.
l. His muscle weakness renders him unable to brush his teeth with a normal toothbrush or to lift a kettle. It affects his speech so that he is not able to talk very loudly or speak clearly as a result.
m. His own perception is that his condition affects him in such a way "that even on 'good' days , I have no real quality of life".
n. He and his wife are dependant on income support from the State. They would be unable to afford deposits or agency fees in relation to private sector lettings.
o. He has made enquiries of the local council to see what housing they might be able to offer. An officer visited the Property and said, as he puts it, that "the Council won't rehouse me and Pauline because apparently we are deliberately homeless, although he said that if we were on the street then they would likely offer bed and breakfast accommodation". He states that "Bed and breakfast accommodation would obviously not be suitable for me".
p. He explains that he and Mrs Constable would need somewhere on the ground floor or a property with wheelchair access and a stair lift if there are stairs. He states that he has not managed to find anything available in the private sector (although he does not give any evidence about what efforts he has made).
q. Mrs Constable is 76 years old. She has severe rheumatoid osteoarthritis and pigeon lung. She lives mostly upstairs while Mr Constable lives exclusively downstairs.
r. Ms Pickles says that there is "no way that [Mr Constable] would cope if he had to move. It would be absolutely devastating for him and Pauline. Neither of them can even walk out of the front door, let alone move any of their things or set up a new home…". I note that assessment, but, as I will explain, little if any weight can be attached to it.
s. There was before the DJ an indication from Mr Constable's neurologist that myasthenia gravis has a risk of entering a crisis state which would be life threatening and require hospitalisation.
t. There was also before the DJ an indication from Dr Khan that there is a potential, generally for adverse results arising from emotional stress, but no indication of how Mr Constable might be expected to react to such stress.
The Law – insolvency provisions
"(2) On such an application the court shall make such order as it thinks just and reasonable having regard to—(a) the interests of the bankrupt's creditors;(b) where the application is made in respect of land which includes a dwelling house which is or has been the home of the bankrupt or the bankrupt's spouse or civil partner or former spouse or former civil partner -(i) the conduct of the spouse, civil partner, former spouse or former civil partner, so far as contributing to the bankruptcy,(ii) the needs and financial resources of the spouse, civil partner, former spouse or former civil partner, and(iii) the needs of any children; and(c) all the circumstances of the case other than the needs of the bankrupt.(3) Where such an application is made after the end of the period of one year beginning with the first vesting under Chapter IV of this Part of the bankrupt's estate in a trustee, the court shall assume, unless the circumstances of the case are exceptional, that the interests of the bankrupt's creditors outweigh all other considerations."
"44. The judge directed herself, in paragraphs 18 and 19 of her judgment, that she needed to weigh up the interests of the only creditors, HMRC, against the interests of Mrs Baker and Samantha. This was true as far as it went, but in my view paid insufficient attention to the requirement in section 335A(2)(c) to have regard to "all the circumstances of the case other than the needs of the bankrupt". The circumstances of the case include the statutory scheme of the bankruptcy legislation, at the heart of which is the vesting of the bankrupt's property in his trustee, with the object that the trustee should then realise the property and distribute the net proceeds among the unsecured creditors on a pari passu basis. Moreover, the clear effect of section 283A of the 1986 Act is that there is a limited period of three years within which the trustee must either take steps towards realisation of the bankrupt's interest in his home, or forfeit that interest as part of the bankrupt's estate. If, as in the present case, the trustee does take action within the requisite period, it seems to me that the court should then exercise its powers under section 335A with the object of enabling the bankrupt's interest in the property to be realised and made available for distribution among his creditors. Only in that way can the underlying purpose of the bankruptcy legislation be achieved.
45. Furthermore, since the vesting of the bankrupt's property in the trustee is central to the operation of the statutory scheme, and since the trustee's reasonable costs are payable in priority to any distribution to creditors, it must follow that the statutory scheme requires the property to be realised even if the proceeds may be swallowed up in meeting the trustee's reasonable costs, with nothing left for the unsecured creditors. This must, I think, be the explanation for the well-established principle that an order for sale should normally be made even if the whole of the net proceeds will be exhausted in paying the expenses of the bankruptcy. The judge clearly had this principle in mind when she said, in paragraph 18, that "even if there were no dividend to the creditors that would not necessarily mean that I should not make an order for sale". I respectfully consider, however, that she may have blunted the force of the principle by expressing it in these qualified and negative terms. More importantly, I think she also failed to give appropriate weight to the fundamental point that an indefinite suspension of the order for sale, for a period that could be measured in decades, is incompatible with the underlying purpose of the bankruptcy code. In all save the most truly exceptional circumstances, that purpose must require realisation within a much shorter time frame, normally to be measured in months rather than years.
"Fourthly, the judge was in my view wrong not to consider any alternative to indefinite postponement of the sale. As I have already explained, such a postponement, on the facts of the present case, cannot be reconciled with the statutory scheme and purpose of the bankruptcy legislation. The need for the Property to be sold within a reasonable period is therefore a nettle which has to be grasped, and since there is no evidence that Samantha's condition is likely to improve, her interests do not require a postponement for longer than it will take to find suitable alternative rented accommodation, and plan the move in a way which will cause her the least distress."
"The principles which the court should follow when considering whether the circumstances of the case are exceptional were conveniently summarised by Lawrence Collins J (as he then was) in Dean v Stout [2005] EWHC 3315 (Ch), [2005] BPIR 1113, at [6] to [11]:"6. The principles which can be derived from the authorities may be summarised as follows. First, the presence of exceptional circumstances is a necessary condition to displace the presumption that the interests of the creditors outweigh all other considerations, but the presence of exceptional circumstances does not debar the court from making an order for sale.
7. Secondly, typically the exceptional circumstances in the modern cases relate to the personal circumstances of one of the joint owners, such as a medical or mental condition.
8. Thirdly, the categories of exceptional circumstances are not to be categorised or defined and the court makes a value judgment after looking at all the circumstances.
9. Fourthly, the circumstances must be exceptional and this expression was intended to apply the same test as the pre-Insolvency Act 1986 decisions on bankruptcy (see In re Citro (Domenico) (a bankrupt) [1991] (Ch) 142, [1991] 1 FLR 71 at 159/160 and 84 respectively), that is to say exceptional or special circumstances which are outside the usual "melancholy consequences of debt and improvidence" (in the words of Nourse LJ) or (in the words of Bingham LJ) "compelling reasons not found in the ordinary run of cases".
10. Fifthly, it is not uncommon for a wife with children to be faced with eviction in circumstances where the realisation of her beneficial interest will not produce enough to buy a comparable home in the same neighbour or, indeed, elsewhere. Such circumstances, while engendering a natural sympathy, cannot be described as exceptional, and it was in that context that Nourse LJ referred to the "melancholy consequences of debt and improvidence" with which every civilised society has been familiar (see 157 and 82 respectively).
11. Sixthly, for the purposes of weighing the interests of the creditors, the creditors have an interest in the order for sale being made, even if the whole of the net proceeds will go towards the expenses of the bankruptcy, and the fact that they will be swallowed up in paying those expenses is not an exceptional circumstance justifying the displacement of the presumption that the interests of the creditors outweigh all other considerations."
27. In Claughton v Charalambous [1998] BPIR 558, Jonathan Parker J said at 562H:
"What is required of the court in applying s335A(3) is, in effect, a value judgment. The court must look at all the circumstances and conclude whether or not they are exceptional. That process leaves, it seems to me, very little scope for the interference by an appellate court.No doubt there may be cases where an appellate court can and should interfere. For example, where there is an error of law appearing on the face of the judgment, or where the conclusion which the court below has reached is so plainly wrong as to raise the inference that in reaching that conclusion the court somehow misdirected itself in law."28. The facts of Claughton v Charalambous show that, in an appropriate case, the exceptional circumstances may be such as to justify a postponement of any order for sale until the bankrupt's spouse either dies or vacates the property. In that case, however, Mrs Charalambous (the bankrupt's wife) had a 50% beneficial interest in the property, and the medical evidence established that she was in very poor health, suffering from chronic renal failure and chronic osteoarthritis. She could walk only with great difficulty and with the aid of a Zimmer frame, and she needed a wheelchair. She was about 60 years old, and evidently had a reduced life expectancy, although how reduced does not appear from the judgment: see 562A-D.
29. Re Bremner [1999] BPIR 185 is another case where an indefinite suspension of an order for sale was directed, but the circumstances were such that the postponement was likely to be measured in months rather than years. The bankrupt, Mr Bremner, was aged 79, and had recently been diagnosed with an inoperable cancer. His life expectancy was probably no more than six months, he was housebound, and his wife (aged 74) was his only carer. She had no beneficial interest in the property, but had a right of occupation while the marriage subsisted. The bankruptcy dated back to 1991, and the evidence was that on an immediate sale of the property there should be enough money to pay all the creditors in full, with some (but not all) of the statutory interest to which they were entitled. Mr Jonathan Sumption QC (as he then was), sitting as a deputy judge of the High Court, held that the circumstances of the case were exceptional, and that the needs of Mrs Bremner (as distinct from those of Mr Bremner, which had to be disregarded) should be recognised by deferring a sale of the property until three months after her husband's impending death. The judge added, at 188E:
"I should make it clear that I would not necessarily have reached the same decision if Mr Bremner had been younger or less ill, or if his life expectancy had been longer than, in fact, it appears to be.""
The Law - appeals
"Before the court can interfere it must be shown that the judge has either erred in principle in his approach, or has left out of account, or taken into account, some feature that he should, or should not, have considered, or that his decision is wholly wrong because the court is forced to the conclusion that he has not balanced the various factors fairly in the scale."
"Certainly it would not be useful to inquire whether different shades of meaning are intended to be conveyed by words such as 'blatant error' used by the President in the present case, and words such as 'clearly wrong,' 'plainly wrong,' or simply 'wrong' used by other judges in other cases. All these various expressions were used in order to emphasise the point that the appellate court should only interfere when they consider that the judge of first instance has not merely preferred an imperfect solution which is different from an alternative imperfect solution which the Court of Appeal might or would have adopted, but has exceeded the generous ambit within which a reasonable disagreement is possible."
The Judgment
"that he would forced in bed and breakfast accommodation which no person in his condition could possibly tolerate or survive, even if he found a hotelier or bed and breakfast proprietor who would take him. For him to have to present himself as street homeless is an affront to decency, but there is no way that he could be safely accommodated temporarily".
"It is not for me to second guess but I personally would be surprised if Mr Constable is able to maintain his state as it currently is without deterioration. Conditions tend to deteriorate and the risk of crisis can come from an infection. This is the best place for Mr Constable to protect his future and I suspect it is the only place he can do so, and I do not see it just that the court should dispossess him of that, in my judgment, opportunity. In those circumstances I find that his interests do exceptionally override those of the creditors."
It difficult to think that the view he expressed in the first two sentences of that quotation did not have any influence on his decision. It was, however, a view which was not based on any of the evidence before him. As to the third sentence, it is not easy to see quite what he was intending to say. Clearly there are many places where Mr Constable would just as well placed to enjoy such quality of life if only they could be made available to him; so one is left simply with his suspicion that in practical terms the Property is the only place where he can protect his future.
The Grounds of Appeal
a. Attacks on the findings of the DJ on the basis that they were conjecture or speculation and not open to him on the evidence.b. As was the case in Grant v Baker, an attack on the exercise of the discretion on the basis of the facts as found.
a. "…no person in [Mr Constable's] position could possibly survive…" being forced into bed and breakfast accommodation. Mr Peachey submits that the only evidence on which this could be based was that of a neurologist who gave generic details of the condition and noted that Mr Constable had been diagnosed in 2009. He had not examined Mr Constable himself. There was no evidence about the likelihood of a "myasthenic crisis" except that people with the condition can occasionally experience such a crisis. The DJ of course had before him as well all the other evidence which I have recited which give a strong flavour of Mr Constable's poor health but that does not establish that Mr Constable could not survive a move to bed and breakfast accommodation, whatever meaning one gives to survive. As to that, if by not survive the DJ meant literally die or perhaps less extremely have a wholly debilitating breakdown, the evidence does not support the conclusion and in that sense I agree with Mr Peachey's submission. If the DJ meant something less, then it is not clear quite what he did mean. And if he used the word survive so as to underline the fact that Mr Constable would find bed and breakfast accommodation intolerable it lends scant support to the view that Mr Constable's circumstances were "truly exceptional". In the context of this ground of appeal, Ms Mattsson relies on what she refers to as the professional opinion of Ms Pickles that there is no way the Mr Constable could cope if he had to move. It is not apparent what, if any, weight the DJ attached to that evidence. In my view, no weight can be attached to it at all. Ms Pickles has, as far as I know, no professional qualifications, certainly not ones enabling her to give an expert opinion on the emotional effect of a move and on Mr Constable's ability to cope, whatever she means by the word cope. It would be wholly unsafe to attach any weight to that evidence.b. "[E]ven if he found a hotelier or bed and breakfast proprietor who would take him". What the DJ is saying here, it seems to me, is that it is not only to be taken into account that bed and breakfast accommodation would be unsuitable but that Mr Constable would have difficulty finding such accommodation in the first place. I agree with Mr Peachey when he says this is wrong because it is the local authority which would find such accommodation in line with its statutory duty, not Mr Constable. In any case, there was no evidence that the local authority would not find suitable accommodation and it is pure speculation that it would not. The DJ himself recognised that the local authority would reconsider the position apparently adopted that Mr Constable would be deliberately homeless and having reached that conclusion it was not open to him to speculate that the temporary accommodation provided according to its statutory duty would not be adequate. I reject Ms Mattsson's submission that the DJ was merely emphasising the that finding bed and breakfast accommodation would be difficult because of Mr Constable's condition. It might well be difficult for Mr Constable himself to find it, but the local authority would be obliged to find some temporary accommodation.
c. "For [Mr Constable] to present as homeless is an affront to decency..". Mr Peachey says that whether this is true or not it is not relevant to the exercise of the discretion. It is unfortunate that many people find themselves presenting as homeless due to an order for sale being made in a bankruptcy. Many such circumstances involving young families or the elderly or frail would be considered by many to be an affront to decency. Ms Mattsson is correct to say that the DJ was not making any general observation about homelessness being an affront to decency but was concerned with the particular situation of Mr Constable. There is, however, some force in Mr Peachey's comparison with other types of people presenting as homeless. In fact, what the DJ said was not that it was an affront to decency that Mr Constable should present as homeless but that he should present as street homeless, by which I imagine he meant that Mr Constable would find himself evicted pursuant to a warrant for possession and find himself of the street. But there was no evidence that such an extreme situation would occur. It must surely be that a local authority knowing of the impending eviction of a seriously disabled person would take steps to ensure that he was not simply thrown onto the street with nowhere to go. There was no evidence that this would happen. The DJ added at the end of [5] of his judgment that there is no way that Mr Constable could safely be accommodated safely: I can see no justification for that finding at all.
d. As part of his finding that there would be an affront to decency, the DJ must be seen as taking into account what he said in [7] of his judgment, that (as I understand what he said) it would be impossible physically for Mr Constable to move. I simply do not understand that. Of course Mr Constable could not physically move without assistance but that is not the point. Obviously someone will have to help him move, as would be the case with almost any household move.
Decision
a. To order a sale and possession within a specified period, such as 6 months or 12 months.b. To make such an order but with express permission for Mr Constable to make an application for a further postponement in which case it would be necessary for me to say whether he would need to demonstrate a change of position.
c. To remit the matter for a full rehearing with the parties being permitted to adduce further evidence.