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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 >> The Official Receiver v Brown [2017] EWHC 2762 (Ch) (07 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/2762.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2762 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BIRMINGHAM
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
AND IN THE MATTER OF CLIVE WASHINGTON BROWN
Birmingham Civil Justice Centre 33 Bull Street Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE OFFICIAL RECEIVER | Applicant | |
-and- | ||
CLIVE WASHINGTON BROWN | Respondent |
____________________
Clive Washington Brown in person
David Lock QC instructed by Neil Davies & Partners for the trustees in bankruptcy on 7 November 2017
Hearing dates : 25 October and 1 November 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Simon Barker QC :
Introduction
" …wil not be returning to Birmingham Civil Justice Centre as events on 25.10.17 prove there is a health and safety risk which he has a statutory obligation to protect himself, the bias, prejudice, and hostility proved against Mr Brown by Judge Barker taking oral evidence that he knew to be false invalidates any order entered by him, and provides additional grounds for appeal against an adverse order for Mr Browns committal to prison".
That extract from Mr Brown's email foreshadowed his non-attendance on 1.11.17 and gave a clear indication of his attitude to the committal proceedings.
"… Further, and unless committal proceedings are set aside by the courts own motion, Mr Brown will rely on the statutory provisions of the IA, the legal effect of case No 8210 of 2016, his continuing duties and obligations as a Trustee for his daughters Trust, as reasonable excuse for not co-operating with the official receivers, as well as proof of fraud against him as a Trustee for his daughters Trust.
in short Judge Barkers Freezing order has provided Mr Brown with reasonable excuse for not recognising a reasonable obligation to the official receiver, because the Official receiver has conspired with the judiciary, David Lock, and others to dishonestly represent property held by Mr Brown on Trust for his daughter, as his personal property, clearly knowing between them that they are prevented by statute from doing so..
..
Judge Barker has therefore been well aware of Mr Browns reasonable excuse for not co-operating with the Official Receiver in order to protect his daughters Trust from the illegal freezing order that he himself had illegally entered against that Truts as Mr Browns personal property. On the evidence of that freezing order against her Trust, Mr Browns daughter, as well as his son as the other beneficary of that Trust, is entitled to compensation for the detriment caused by the dishonest representation of her Trust as part of Mr Browns personal estate".
This statement by Mr Brown continues and develops his incorrect view of the litigation which led to his bankruptcy and of his bankruptcy process and of the bankruptcy litigation concerning him. It does not begin to provide a reasonable excuse for non-compliance with his obligations under ss. 288, 291, 312 and 333 IA 1986.
"At best there are grounds only for a fine given Mr Browns daughters cointinuing need for representation by him, and her potential need for representation under a private prosecution for fraud against her Trust. Take note that where the s.339 order is not set aside immediately, Phoenix has the authority of Mr Brown to invite Judge Barker to not waste further time and to enter his fine as he sees fit, that is unless he intends to have Mr Brown incarcerated in prison to obstruct, frustrate, and pervert justice for his daughter."
I keep in mind Mr Brown's sense of grievance while considering the appropriate sanction; however, the factual basis is misconceived. Mr Brown addresses punishment but there is no indication of atonement and nothing that constitutes mitigation.
Principles applicable to sanctions for contempt of court
(1) whether another party to proceedings is prejudiced, by virtue of the contempt and whether that prejudice is capable of remedy;
(2) the extent to which the contemnor has acted under pressure;
(3) whether the breach of the order or the contempt in the face of the court was culpable or unintentional;
(4) the degree of culpability;
(5) whether the contemnor was placed in breach by reason of the conduct of others;
(6) whether the contemnor appreciated the seriousness of the breach;
(7) whether the contemnor has cooperated, and if so, at what stage and to what extent;
(8) whether the contemnor has admitted his contempt and has entered the equivalent of a guilty plea, and if so what, if any, reduction should be applied to the appropriate sentence;
(9) whether the contemnor has made a sincere apology for his contempt;
(10) the contemnor's previous character and antecedents; and,
(11) any personal mitigation advanced on the contemnor's behalf.
Culpability in the context of sentencing has four gradations or categories : deliberate, knowing, reckless and negligent.
(1) a substantial breach of a freezing order merits condign punishment;
(2) condign punishment normally means imprisonment. However, there may be circumstances where a substantial fine is sufficient, for example if the contempt is purged and relevant assets recovered;
(3) continuing failure to disclose information engages consideration of a long sentence, possibly the maximum two years for the coercive purpose;
(4) where a breach is continuing, fairness may require the court to identify the portion of the sentence that is punishment and the portion that is coercive and might be remitted in the event of prompt and full compliance; and,
(5) when passing the sentence, the court does not have regard to the actual time likely to be spent in prison.
The principles applied to the circumstances of the case and to Mr Brown
Decision
Conclusion