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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 >> Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy v PAG Asset Preservation Ltd [2019] EWHC 2890 (Ch) (30 October 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2890.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2890 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS & PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (Ch D)
IN THE MATTER OF PAG ASSET PRESERVATION LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF MBV VACANT PROPERTY SOLUTIONS LIMITED
1 Bridge Street West, Manchester M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
____________________
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR BUSINESS, ENERGY AND INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY | Petitioner | |
-and- | ||
PAG ASSET PRESERVATION LIMITED | Respondent | |
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR BUSINESS, ENERGY AND INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY | Petitioner | |
-and- | ||
MB VACANT PROPERTY SOLUTIONS LIMITED | Respondent |
____________________
David Chivers QC and Nicholas Trompeter (instructed by Gorvins, Stockport) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 24, 24, 26, 27 September & 1 October 2019
Draft judgment circulated: 11 October 2019
____________________
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
I direct that pursuant to CPR PD 39A paragraph 6.1 no official shorthand note shall be taken of this Judgment and that copies of this version as handed down may be treated as authentic.
His Honour Judge Stephen Davies
Introduction and summary of decision
(A) The witnesses [paragraphs 10 to 16](B) The relevant rating legislation [paragraphs 17 to 30]
(C) Public interest winding up – the relevant legal principles [paragraphs 31 to 35]
(D) The Companies [paragraphs 36 to 40]
(E) Schemes 1 and 2 [paragraphs 41 to 42]
(F) The judgment of Norris J in the PAGMS case [paragraphs 43 to 49]
(G) Scheme 3 [paragraphs 50 to 82]
(H) The Petitions [paragraphs 83 to 100]
(I) The purpose of members voluntary liquidation (MVL) [paragraphs 101 to 116]
(J) Application of the above principles to the facts of this case [paragraphs 117 to 133]
(A) The witnesses
(B) The relevant rating legislation
"1. Section 45 of the Local Government Finance Act 1988 imposes a liability to pay business rates (called "a national non-domestic rate" and usually referred to as "NNDR") upon hereditaments if four conditions are satisfied. One of the conditions is that the hereditament must fall within a class prescribed by regulations. Regulation 3 of the Non Domestic Rating (Unoccupied Property) (England) Regulations 2008 (SI 2008/386) prescribed all non-domestic hereditaments other than those exempted by Regulation 4. Regulation 4(k) of the 2008 Regulations exempted:-
"Any hereditament…whose owner is a company which is subject to a winding up order made under the Insolvency Act 1986 or which is being wound up voluntarily under that Act".
"On this evidence it is not possible to find that NNDR avoidance/mitigation schemes are contrary to the public interest (though they may be): nor would it in principle be right for the Court in one case to resolve what is essentially a far-reaching economic and political question that is properly the province of Parliament".
And he continued at [62] that:
"62. A further reason for this conclusion is that I am not persuaded that companies and partnerships that offer tax mitigation schemes (I say nothing of tax evasion schemes) are in general carrying on a business which is inherently objectionable even if the products offered are highly artificial. There are many such companies and partnerships, some of which are of the highest repute."
Rossendale BC v Hurstwood [2019] EWCA Civ 364
"The use of companies to avoid the incidence of tax or NDR [business rates] can hardly be described as rare or novel. They are frequently inserted in tax avoidance schemes for no reason other than to mitigate or avoid the incidence of one form or another of taxation. Further, as the Judge said in his judgment at [3], it has been recognised for a considerable time that ratepayers or potential ratepayers can and do organise their affairs so as to avoid liability to pay rates."
"Counsel for the claimants sought to persuade us, in their written and oral submissions, that there was at least arguably still scope for the Ramsay principle to operate, with the consequence that the actions should not be struck out and there should be a full investigation of the facts at trial after the parties had fully pleaded their respective cases and disclosure had taken place. In their written argument, they submitted that "the notion of an owner of a hereditament as a person entitled to possession has to be interpreted purposively as an owner with a real entitlement to possession, such that an SPV whose only reason for existence was to accept a lease, with no commercial purpose other than to avoid the liability to pay [national non-domestic rates], is not the owner of a hereditament." The fundamental problem with this submission, however, is that it elides the steps which have to be followed in deciding whether a Ramsay approach is possible. One step must always be to construe the relevant legislation, to see whether it admits of a Ramsay approach. For that purpose, it is not enough (as cases like MacNiven and BMBF show) merely to point to the tax-avoidance motive of the ratepayer, or the pre-ordained nature of the transactions which are undertaken, or to aver that the SPV company's entitlement to possession is "unreal" where it has been brought into existence for the sole purpose of taking the lease. As I have sought to explain, the concept of entitlement to possession in section 65(1) of the 1988 Act is an intrinsically legal one, which is satisfied the moment that a valid lease to the SPV company has been executed. Where the relevant concept is of such a nature, the tax avoidance motivation of the parties and the artificiality of the arrangements become irrelevant, because they have nothing to do with the relevant legal concept."
"130. One is therefore looking for words which have to be interpreted. One is not looking to a general sort of "Parliament cannot have intended to allow this sort of thing" approach. It is a tighter approach than that.…
135. In my view this exposes the argument for what it is, which is not so much an attempt to construe words in the statute, but to divine a purpose behind a provision in the statute, extract that purpose and then apply a principle that a person should not be able to evade that purpose because it was Parliament's purpose."
(C) Public interest winding up – the relevant legal principles
"5. There was a large measure of agreement about the principles to be adopted in the exercise of this jurisdiction. The principles I shall apply are these:-a) Even if the SoS thinks it expedient in the public interest to wind up a company, the Court still has a discretion whether or not to make an order.
b) Before making an order the Court must be satisfied that it is just and equitable to wind the company up.
c) The burden of proof lies on the SoS to persuade the Court (having proved matters of fact to the requisite civil standard) that it is just and equitable to wind the company up.
d) The Court must balance competing reasons why the company should be wound up and why it should not be wound up upon a consideration of the totality of the evidence (per Nicholls LJ in Re Walter L Jacob & Co Limited [1989] BCLC 345 at 353 b-d).
e) As a result of undertaking that exercise the Court must be able to identify for itself the aspects of the public interest which would be promoted by making a winding up order in the particular case (ibid at p353f);
f) It is not necessary for the business of the company to involve illegality. As Millett LJ said in Re Senator Hanseatische [1997] 1 WLR 515 at 522h:-
"On the contrary the phrases used (namely "expedient in the public interest" and "just and equitable") to my mind indicate that Parliament did not intend to impose such a restriction but instead simply decided to leave to the Secretary of State to form a view as to what was expedient in the public interest and the court then to decide on the material before it whether the justice and equity of the case dictated that the company concerned should be wound up".g) Where the business of the company does not involve the commission of illegal acts or breaches of regulatory requirements the company may nonetheless be wound up if its business is "inherently objectionable" because its activities are contrary to a clearly identified public interest. So in Abacrombie & Co Limited [2008] EWHC 2520 (Ch) the company operated a debtor advisory service. David Richards J explained:-
"The purpose of the company's business as it related to clients with equity in their residential property was, prior to the client's bankruptcy, to sell the equity to the client's spouse or partner at as low a price as possible and to use the proceeds to fund the company's charges which were both excessive and unjustifiably charged to the debtor client. The effect, as the company…well appreciated, was to deprive the debtor's estate of any substantial return or value from the debtor's beneficial interest which was likely to have been the only asset of any substance. The effect was detrimental to creditors and undermined the proper administration of the bankruptcy of the debtor" (see paragraph [60]).He had earlier at paragraph [15] held:-"The arrangements, as operated by the company, in my judgment, subverted the proper functioning of the law and procedures of bankruptcy".h) Such conduct is sometimes described as disclosing "a lack of commercial probity", and whilst this frequently might involve preying on the public and inducing individual members of the public to participate in transactions which are without benefit to them, it can also involve prejudice to the public generally (for example by casting burdens on the general body of tax payers). An illustration of this may be found in SoS for Business Innovation and Skills v PGMRS Limited [2010] EWHC 2864[1] (Ch) in which four companies traded at the expense of HMRC (by not paying either VAT or PAYE) until such time as they were insolvent, conduct that the judge held represented a lack of commercial probity.
i) However in making the judgment whether a business is inherently objectionable "the court has to be careful of being priggish" (see Re Force Sun Limited [2002] EWHC 443 (Ch) at paragraph [26], a point which Mr Chivers QC reinforced with a submission that this was a court of law and not a court of morals. If this is simply a submission that I am bound to decide the case according to law and by reference to principle and precedent I unhesitatingly accept the submission. If this is a submission that the law in this area is devoid of moral content, then I disagree. Concepts such as "inherent objectionability" or "want of commercial probity" are bound to have some moral content, though that content is not the subjective moral perception of the individual judge, but must be informed by any discernable policy of the law and guided by the view of other judges in other cases.
j) Finally, to wind up an active and solvent company is a serious step, and the Court must be satisfied that reasons of sufficient weight have been advanced to justify taking that course (Re Walter L Jacob & Co Limited (supra) at p354d-e).
(D) The Companies
(E) Schemes 1 and 2
"7. Until April 2008 owners of non-domestic property were entitled to benefit from some relief against NNDR in relation to empty commercial and industrial properties. But from the 1 April 2008 that relief was removed. Shortly thereafter the global financial crisis occurred which led to a property recession. PAG was faced with increasing numbers of empty properties and a general fall in rental yields. As at April 2008 approximately 25% of its commercial and industrial property portfolio was wholly or partially empty. In anticipation of the removal of relief in respect of NNDR PAG began to operate what it called "a NNDR mitigation scheme".8. Under this initial scheme PAG set up a new company ("Newco") which entered into a lease with PAG to occupy the vacant property at a nominal rent, Newco assuming liability for the unoccupied business rates. On the day the lease commenced PAG would waive entitlement to the rent, and Newco would pass a special resolution to place itself into members' voluntary winding up. Although placed in a members' voluntary winding up, no liquidator was appointed. There was accordingly no one in office who could disclaim the lease, which would therefore simply continue until its 3 year term expired by effluxion of time (the lease generally being put in a drawer and forgotten about). If a bona fide third party tenant came along who wished to take a lease on genuine commercial terms then PAG would exercise a 7 day termination right so that the property became available to the incoming tenant with vacant possession.
9. Although initially confined to properties of which PAG was the freeholder or head leaseholder, in about May 2009 the initial scheme was developed to include other landlords. In return for being allowed to participate in the scheme these third party landlords paid PAG a fee representing a proportion (generally 30% to 40%) of the amounts of NNDR saved by using the scheme. In all 13 Newcos were established. They saved PAG about £1.5 million in NNDR, and third party scheme users about £7.4 million.
10. On the 31 May 2011 the SoS presented petitions against each of those companies for their winding up on public interest grounds. PAG decided not to oppose the petitions and winding up orders were made on the 27 July 2011. PAG itself was not the subject of a petition.
11. On the 24 August 2011 PAG Management was incorporated for the purpose of managing and coordinating the operation of a revised scheme, that being its sole trading activity. The revised scheme was almost identical to the initial scheme, save for the fact that now a liquidator was appointed as soon as the SPV entered members' voluntary liquidation."
"(a) PAG Management incorporates a special purpose vehicle ("the SPV"):(b) Contemporaneously PAG Management's client companies will grant leases to the SPV:
(c) The leases are generally for a term of 3 years at a rent of £1 per annum (and containing obligations as to use and repair) but terminable on 7 days' notice:
(d) Contemporaneously with the grant of the lease to the SPV the landlord waives the right to receive sums due under the lease:
(e) Contemporaneously with the grant of the leases the SPV is placed in members' voluntary liquidation (a course that is possible because, by virtue of the landlords' waiver, the directors of the SPV can make a statutory declaration of solvency):
(f) The SPV is now a company in members' voluntary winding up and is itself exempt from NNDR:
(g) The landlord (PAG Management's client company) is not in occupation of the hereditament:
(h) The members' voluntary liquidation proceeds slowly:
(i) Under a fee agreement entered into between the Landlord and PAG Management the latter receives by way of fee a percentage (varying between 15% and 40%) of the NNDR saved at a result of the lease being in place:
(j) Meanwhile the landlord refurbishes and/or markets the property and if a taker is found then the lease to the SPV is terminated and the new tenant takes occupation, no "empty rates" having been paid in the meanwhile."
(F) The judgment of Norris J in the PAGMS case
"63. This leaves for consideration the remaining grounds which are an amalgam of "abuse of the insolvency legislation" and "lack of commercial probity having regard to the elements of the scheme". I hold that the SoS succeeds on this ground, that upon consideration of all the evidence it is just and equitable that PAG Management should be wound up because its activities are contrary to a clearly defined public interest, and because on balance the public interest is better served by winding up than by any other outcome.""65. I find that the business of PAG Management necessarily involves (a) the creation by PAG Management of companies which exist for no purpose other than immediately going into liquidation; (b) the creation by PAG Management of assets for the sole purpose of their being held by those companies in liquidation (subject to the right of the freeholder to recover them if the freeholder can turn them to advantage); (c) the putting in place by PAG Management of arrangements which enable it to have effective control over the conduct of these liquidations as regards the maintenance in being of those assets; and (d) the exercise of that control to secure that the liquidations continue rather than proceed to a conclusion, the real objective being that each liquidation shall act as a shelter for the assets specifically created to be held by the company in order that PAG Management might earn fees in relation to those assets. In my judgment the purpose of liquidation is the collection, realisation (though not invariably) and distribution of assets in satisfaction of the claims of creditors and the entitlements of members. The adjustments made to third party rights (whether they be stays upon enforcement or exemptions from fiscal liabilities otherwise falling upon companies) are made to achieve that purpose. I hold that there is a clear public interest in ensuring that the purpose of liquidations is not subverted, as I consider it is by treating a company in liquidation as a shelter (and seeking to prolong its continuation as such). This misuse of the insolvency legislation demonstrates a lack of commercial probity. It its own way it also "subvert[s] the proper functioning of the law and procedures of bankruptcy".
"67. Mr Chivers QC, who has great experience and high standing in this field, gave evidence from the Bar that many corporate reconstruction schemes involve the interposition of a company to receive assets and then to be wound up (perhaps for tax reasons or as a mechanism of distribution) and that it had never been suggested that this was improper; and that many schemes of very many sorts require directors to take steps which are wholly predetermined (in relation to which it was never contemplated that they would exercise independent judgment). Of such schemes I say nothing, save that if the liquidation is not genuinely a collection and distribution of assets then its propriety might need to be reconsidered. For me it is the use of the company in liquidation as an asset shelter and the inherent bias towards prolongation of the liquidation that is subversive of the true purpose and proper functioning of insolvency law. So I cannot accept Mr Chivers QCs submission that the operation of the scheme through the medium of insolvency is not commercially improper."
"69. PAG Management is an active and solvent business. That business involves the promotion of an NNDR mitigation scheme. Of itself the promotion of tax mitigation schemes is not an inherently objectionable activity. In the course of so doing it incidentally uses artificial leases having no commercial reality and containing some terms which are mere pretences; and on occasion having procured that its creature companies enter liquidation, it has delayed appointing new officeholders. These historic events would not of themselves be of sufficient weight to warrant a winding up. But PAG Management's business model involves a misuse of the insolvency legislation in the way I have described and the SoS has satisfied me that it is just and equitable to wind up the company that I ought to exercise the discretion conferred by 124A of the 1986 Act in that way: and I will so order."
(G) Scheme 3
The fee agreements
The leases
"A The landlord and the SPV are entering into this lease in good faith to transfer liability for business rates in relation to the premises to the SPV with the purpose of (amongst other things) mitigation of business rates which would otherwise be payable by the landlord … ("the Purpose")"B The rights and obligations in this lease are subject to the Purpose …"
The determination premium
Services provided by the SPVs to the landlords
The MVLs
(H) The Petitions
(I) The purpose of members' voluntary liquidation (MVL)
"(1) Whenever the Period, if any, fixed for the Duration of the Company by the Articles of Association expires, or whenever the Event, if any, occurs, upon the Occurrence of which it is provided by the Articles of Association that the Company is to be dissolved, and the Company in General Meeting has passed a Resolution requiring the Company to be wound up voluntarily:(2) Whenever the Company has passed a Special Resolution requiring the Company to be wound up voluntarily:
(3) Whenever the Company has passed an Extraordinary Resolution to the Effect that it has been proved to their Satisfaction that the Company cannot by reason of its Liabilities continue its Business, and that it is advisable to wind up the same."
(J) Application of the above principles to the facts of this case
(a) Mr Chivers is right when he submits that this paragraph of this judgment should not, with respect to Norris J, be treated as the equivalent of a statutory checklist where it is sufficient if any one or more of the identified features are present, nor could Norris J ever have intended that it should be used in such a way;(b) What Norris J was really identifying at [65] to be objectionable was that the "real objective" was that "each liquidation shall act as a shelter for the assets specifically created to be held by the company", because that was contrary to the purpose of liquidation as being the collection, realisation and distribution of assets. In my view what was crucial in that case was that there was no collection, realisation and distribution of assets intended or effected in the voluntary liquidations operated by PAGMS so that the only purpose of those liquidations was for them to operate as a shelter for assets which were not being collected, realised or distributed. That, as I have said, is not the case here.
(c) The insolvency legislation is not misused where the MVLs do indeed involve the collection, realisation and distribution of assets, even though the process is designed to achieve that objective and deploys the use of artificial assets for that very purpose. Alternatively, to the extent that it might be said that there is a misuse, it is not sufficiently reprehensible when set against the whole of the factual and legislative context to justify a conclusion that the activities of the Companies are so clearly lacking in commercial probity or otherwise so clearly against the public interest as to justify their being wound up on public interest grounds.
Note 1 The correct reference is [2010] EWHC 2983 (Ch). [Back] Note 2 Save in one case, where it was 50%. [Back] Note 3 Inserting for convenience the abbreviations employed in this judgment. [Back] Note 4 Initially he said “very few” landlords got this loyalty bonus but the immediately volunteered that this was not correct. [Back]