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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 >> Weir v Hilsdon [2017] EWHC 983 (Ch) (04 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/983.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 983 (Ch) |
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Appeal Ref: CH-2016-000162 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
On Appeal from the County Court at Kingston
Order of DJ Payne dated 9 February 2016
In Bankruptcy
Re: Claire Elizabeth Hilsdon
Royal Courts of Justice, Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MICHELLE ANNE WEIR (as Trustee in Bankruptcy of Claire Elizabeth Hilsdon) |
Applicant/Respondent |
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- and - |
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CLAIRE ELIZABETH HILSDON |
Respondent/Appellant |
____________________
Richard Ascroft (instructed by Everys) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 26 January 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Nugee:
Introduction
Outline Facts
"The relevant period for the purposes of s279 Insolvency Act 1986 and Schedule 19 to the Enterprise Act 2002 shall cease to run until such time as the Trustee in Bankruptcy confirms to the court by filing a report that the bankrupt has complied with his duties and obligations or until the court orders otherwise."
The law
"279 Duration
(1) A bankrupt is discharged from bankruptcy at the end of the period of one year beginning with the date on which the bankruptcy commences.
(3) On the application of the official receiver or the trustee of a bankrupt's estate, the court may order that the period specified in subsection (1) shall cease to run until—
(a) the end of a specified period, or
(b) the fulfilment of a specified condition.
(4) The court may make an order under subsection (3) only if satisfied that the bankrupt has failed or is failing to comply with an obligation under this Part.
(5) In subsection (3)(b) "condition" includes a condition requiring that the court be satisfied of something.
…"
The one-year period was introduced by the Enterprise Act 2002 with effect from April 2004. There was originally provision in s. 279(2) for an application for early discharge, but it was repealed in 2013. In the present case the practical effect is that Mrs Hilsdon would have been discharged on 20 February 2016 if no order had been made under s. 279(3).
"333 Duties of bankrupt in relation to trustee
(1) The bankrupt shall—
(a) give to the trustee such information as to his affairs,
…
as the trustee may for the purposes of carrying out his functions under any of this Group of Parts reasonably require."
"It is clear from the terms of s.279 of the IA 1986 that postponement of discharge is linked to a failure to comply with the obligations imposed on a bankrupt by Part IX. But is the purpose of the power to postpone a discharge to provide an incentive to full compliance? Or is it that the disabilities arising from being an undischarged bankrupt should, in the public interest, continue until there has been full compliance? I doubt whether, on the facts of this case, it is necessary to reach a final conclusion on those questions. But in my view the purpose of the power is the latter, even though its effect may be to achieve the former. Were it otherwise I would have expected Parliament to have made discharge conditional on full compliance."
Kitchin LJ then continued at [51] as follows:
"A purpose of the power conferred by section 279 is therefore to extend the period of the bankruptcy and to ensure that the bankrupt continues to suffer the disabilities arising from his undischarged bankruptcy until he complies with his obligations. I accept the submission advanced by the trustee that in this sense the power is intended to be penal in character and used for purposes connected with the functions of the official receiver and the trustee and to allow the trustee to get in, realise and distribute the bankrupt's estate in accordance with the provisions of Chapter IV."
The application
(1) Mrs Hilsdon's explanation for 2 payments of £10,000 on 24 February 2015 and £10,027 on 10 March 2015.
(2) Copies of invoices delivered by her (as Candoo PR) to a client called Nominet, and of her contract with Nominet.
(3) Copy statements for a bank account in the name of her mother which Mrs Hilsdon was using.
(4) Copy statements for a Post Office cash card.
(5) An updated income and expenditure form.
(6) Mrs Hilsdon's explanation of why she had not been paid for services provided to a company called What's Ticking Today Ltd.
The payments of £10,000 and £10,027
"I explained to you at the time that I was desperate for a home for the girls and me so I used this as the deposit for the property and for the removal costs etc."
(e-mail of 3 January 2016). Ms Weir asked for an explanation as to why there were two payments (letter of 18 January 2016). Mrs Hilsdon said that she had asked for bank statements for her mother's account and once she had them she would be able to show what payments were made to whom in respect of her house move (e-mail of 22 January 2016). She later provided the bank statements (on 5 February 2016) but no further explanation was given.
"Despite this advice, as explained in the debtor's history, out of sheer desperation to be reunited with her children, she has utilised some of the divorce payments to place a rent deposit on the property and pay some essential living expenses."
As Ms Johnson says, that makes it clear that Ms Weir already knew that much.
The Nominet invoices and Nominet contract
Statements for mother's bank account
Post Office cash card statements
Updated income and expenditure form
What's Ticking Today Ltd
Summary on original complaints
(1) A full explanation of the payment of £10,000 to her mother.(2) Copies of the Nominet invoices for 1 September and 20 November 2015.
(3) Bank statements for her mother's bank account for 20 to 26 February 2015.
(4) The supporting documentation for the updated income and expenditure form.
Further information outstanding
(i) Supporting documentation for the updated income and expenditure statement.This has already been referred to above.(ii) Copy invoices relating to payments for GoDaddy.com.
Ms Weir asked for copies of invoices for 14 payments to GoDaddy.com (letter of 15 January 2016). These were small payments (between £3.49 and £43.06), most of which pre-dated the bankruptcy. Mrs Hilsdon said she had no receipts (e-mail of 18 January 2016). Ms Weir said she wanted invoices not receipts (letter of 3 February 2016). Mrs Hilsdon asked where in the Insolvency Act it states that receipts could be requested for the period before the bankruptcy (e-mail of 4 February 2016). Ms Johnson accepted therefore that invoices had not been provided but said that this explained why.
(iii) Information regarding a card ending 2435.
It is accepted that Mrs Hilsdon had stated that she did not know whose card this was (e-mail of 4 February 2016).
(iv) Copy invoices for work carried out for WTT.
When Mrs Hilsdon said she had been paid for work done for WTT she asked if Ms Weir wanted the invoices (e-mail of 18 January 2016). Ms Weir said she did (letter of 22 January 2016). Ms Johnson accepted that they had not been provided but said that Mrs Hilsdon could not be said to have failed to co-operate.
(v) Details of funding provided by Mrs Hilsdon to WTT.
It is accepted that Mrs Hilsdon had provided this (e-mail of 4 February 2016).
(vi) Invoices for payments made on Post Office cash card.
Ms Weir asked for details, including copy invoices, for a large number of payments made on the Post Office cash card (letters of 22 January 2016 and 3 February 2016). Ms Johnson accepted that these had not been provided but said it was an unreasonable request.
(vii) Details of Mrs Hilsdon's insurance policy as required by the PR Network contract (that is the Nominet contract).
It is accepted that Mrs Hilsdon had said that she did not have such an insurance policy (e-mail of 4 February 2016).
(viii) An explanation of why Mrs Hilsdon was paying creditors of WTT.
It is accepted that Mrs Hilsdon had explained that she was helping a friend and had sold some furniture to help fund WTT (e-mail of 30 January 2016).
(ix) An explanation of why the Rock Cottage tenancy had been termimated and what had happened to the deposit?
It is accepted that Mrs Hilsdon had explained why the tenancy had been terminated. Ms Weir asked what had happened to the deposit (letter of 3 February 2016). Ms Johnson said it was unreasonable to expect Mrs Hilsdon to provide an answer within 2 days. In fact Mrs Hilsdon explained that she had not received it but had asked for it back (e-mail of 4 February 2016).
(x) An explanation why the WTT telephone number transferred to Mrs Hilsdon's number.
It is accepted that Mrs Hilsdon had provided this.
(xi) Details of Mrs Hilsdon's trip to Warsaw.
Ms Weir asked for details of a trip that Mrs Hilsdon had made to Warsaw including copies of invoices for travel, accommodation and the like (letter of 3 February 2016). Mrs Hilsdon explained that it was to meet a company that had asked her to do some PR for them, and that she financed the trip. She said she would send the receipts.
Ms Johnson said that this was an unreasonable request.
The hearing
"I agree that I have over the last year not been as compliant as I should have been"
and:
"I agree that I haven't given all the information as I should have done at the time but I'm just…I just want someone to help me."
At that point DJ Payne said that he appreciated that she had more that she could probably say to him but that he had got the picture. There was then this interchange:
"DJ Payne: the key thing is the trustee has got legal responsibilities too and effectively the trustee is saying to me now "There are still some things which we don't…
Mrs Hilsdon: Yes
DJ Payne: …know and we, I need to know", and I think you are conceding that.
Mrs Hilsdon: I absolutely agree
DJ Payne: And it seems to me therefore that it follows pretty inevitably that it would be wrong for me to say that the bankruptcy comes to an end on the twelve month…
Mrs Hilsdon: I understand that…
DJ Payne: …period.
Mrs Hilsdon: …as well.
DJ Payne: Now that gives me – well thank you for that, that's…
Mrs Hilsdon: Of course.
DJ Payne: …that's helpful because you're not trying to persuade me that black is white."
Ground 1 – Taking into account the letter of 3 February 2016
Ground 2 – Failure to consider Mrs Hilsdon's documents
Ground 4 – Ms Weir's real purpose was to apply for an Income Payments Order
"The real issue underlying the matter has been the pursuit by the trustee of an income payments agreement which the debtor has refused to enter into in the belief that he has no income and the payments he and his family receive are payment for his expenses. The reasonableness, or otherwise, of those payments is a matter for an application for an income payments order and not for an application for the suspension of an automatic discharge."
Ms Johnson submitted that in the present case Ms Weir had confirmed her intention to pursue an IPO as early as her letter of 10 July 2015, but had then, apart from seeking invoices, not sought any other information until her letter of 22 December 2015, which did not leave her sufficient time to apply for an IPO. It ought to have been obvious to DJ Payne that the real purpose of the application was to extend time for Ms Weir to apply for an IPO; indeed in an e-mail of 28 January 2016, Ms Weir said in terms that the application to suspend had been made:
"because I am not in receipt of all the information necessary to make an informed view as to whether an Income Payments Order is relevant."
"the information he had received was both inadequate and inconsistent and therefore he has been unable to properly investigate, prior to the end of the discharge period, whether Mr Nash [the bankrupt] ought to be making payments to his creditors."
Mr Registrar Nicholls however rejected this contention on the facts: Mr Nash had made his position clear (that money he had received from a discretionary trust was not income but payment towards his and his family's expenses), and the question whether that was right or wrong was more appropriately to be decided by the trustee applying for an IPO than by applying for a suspension. There is nothing to suggest that Mr Registrar Nicholls would have taken the same view had he accepted the trustee's contentions on the facts.
Ground 8 – the form of the Order was contrary to s. 279(3) of the Act
"the plainest possible proof [of] non-co-operation, breach of bankruptcy obligations, indeed downright dishonesty in Mr Bland's dealings with Mr Mawer."
The Chief Registrar summarised the position as follows (see at [21]):
"The picture I have is of a trustee trying to do a proper job of investigating a bankruptcy of some complexity with little assistance from the bankrupt in terms of the provision of documents, the giving of reliable and truthful information and of a trustee being impeded by conduct designed to defeat or delay his proper avenues of inquiry."
In those circumstances he made an order in materially the same form as that made here. Rose J rejected a submission that that form of order (which counsel for the bankrupt accepted was in a form commonly used in bankruptcy proceedings) was inappropriate, and should be replaced by an order for a particular time or that the condition should be much more specific. She was initially attracted by those submissions but concluded that it was neither necessary nor desirable to change the order: the trustee was not acting oppressively, and if the bankrupt considered he had answered all the questions asked, he could activate the provision in the order giving him liberty to apply.
"The suspension order should either specify a period of time for which the running of the discharge period will be suspended or one or more conditions to be fulfilled before the running of the discharge period can be resumed. The undischarged bankrupt should not be put into the position of not knowing what he has to do to reinstate the running of his discharge period, if the suspension is not for a determined period of time."
This was essentially reaffirmed in guidance issued in 2008:
"The bankrupt's discharge can only be suspended for a specific period or until certain conditions are met and not indefinitely. It is important that the bankrupt knows what he/she has to do to reinstate the running of the discharge period or otherwise when the discharge will have effect."
"I really want this behind me so please let me know what else you require so I can comply fully and so you thereafter can inform the court that my bankruptcy can be discharged."
But it was not until 15 March 2016 that Ms Weir sent a response indicating what information she still required. That vividly illustrated that once an order had been made in the form it was here, the pressure is off the trustee and the bankrupt is left in limbo without knowing what she should be doing and without giving her any clear goal to work towards.
"There may well be circumstances in which policy considerations strongly point to such an order being required. It is well-known that bankrupt individuals often take significant steps to obstruct and mislead trustees. It may well be that, even after one year, the trustee is not only unable to state that full compliance has occurred, but also unable to know how much more there is to discover."
On the findings of the Chief Registrar, Mawer v Bland itself was such a case. In such a case, the difficulty for the trustee, and hence for the Court, is that of "unknown unknowns", that is that the trustee may well not know quite what it is that he does not know. The answer to any particular question may very well lead to a whole host of further questions. In a case where a bankrupt is being unco-operative, obstructive, misleading or downright dishonest, there is therefore a real difficulty in framing an order as suspending the bankruptcy until the bankrupt has answered a specific list of questions, as the bankrupt may very well do the minimum necessary to be able to claim to have answered the specified questions, while leaving the trustee still in the dark.
"to provide a modern bankruptcy regime that encourages business start-ups and allows those who have failed honestly to achieve financial rehabilitation whilst repaying the most they can reasonably afford to their creditors and to have a second chance to make an economic contribution to society."
"A functioning and efficient personal insolvency regime must properly impose an obligation on the trustee to make substantial progress during the period prior to the automatic discharge. Save in the most exceptional circumstances, a court could reasonably expect a trustee to be able to identify, by the time the application for a suspension is made, either a time period during which full compliance will likely be achieved or a list of questions which remain to be answered. In those mainstream cases, the court should properly suspend the discharge either for that fixed period or until such time as the bankrupt has provided honest and cooperative answers to those questions.
The ability of a trustee to request the type of order made in Mawer and Wilson provides something of a disincentive to make this progress. The making of such an order deprives the bankruptcy of the sense of urgency which is needed to create an efficient and functioning system. Bankruptcies cannot be allowed to become drawn out whilst the trustee undertakes increasingly speculative searches for assets and information."
Again there is considerable force in this point and I accept the validity of it.
Other Grounds – 3, 5, 6 and 7
Conclusion