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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 >> Causer & Anor v All Star Leisure (Group) Ltd [2019] EWHC 3231 (Ch) (28 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/3231.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3231 (Ch), [2020] Bus LR 349, [2019] WLR(D) 685 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BIRMINGHAM
Insolvency and Companies List (ChD)
Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
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Lee Causer (1) Neville Side (2) |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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All Star Leisure (Group) Ltd |
Defendant |
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The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 8 November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ David Cooke:
Background
i) At 3.37 pm he logged on to CE File and attempted to upload the notice of appointment and associated documents. For reasons he is not able to explain, the CE File system would not accept the documents as uploaded and instead saved his attempt as a draft application.ii) He made a second attempt at 3.50 pm and a third at 4.01pm, with the same result on both occasions..
iii) He printed and re-scanned the documents and made a fourth attempt at 4.18 pm which was successful. He received an electronic confirmation that the documents had been submitted and the fee paid at that time.
iv) He then spoke to a clerk at the court who told him that he had wrongly entered the bank as the filing party in the CE File system, and should have given the company's name instead. He did not agree with that (and it appears to be wrong) but uploaded the same documents again as a precaution at 4.37 pm, this time naming the company as the filing party. He received an acknowledgment of receipt at 4.38 pm.
v) A minute later he received a CE File message, presumably from the clerk he had spoken to, stating that his 4.18 pm filing had been "rejected" because "you need to lodge the company details and not the administrator's". This was not consistent with what he had been told on the telephone.
vi) The uploaded documents were electronically sealed and became available online at 4.54 pm. Presumably this followed acceptance of his 4.37 upload, but the sealed documents were the same as those he had uploaded at 4.18 pm (and attempted to at 3.37pm).
The issue
"General
1.1
(1) This Practice Direction is made under rules 5.5, 7.12 and 51.2 of the Civil Procedure Rules ("CPR"). It provides for a pilot scheme ("Electronic Working") to—
(a) operate from 16 November 2015 to 6 April 2020;
(b) operate in—
(i) the Chancery Division of the High Court, the Commercial Court, the Technology and Construction Court, the Circuit Commercial Court, and the Admiralty Court, at the Royal Courts of Justice, Rolls Building, London (together, "the Rolls Building Jurisdictions"); …
(iii) the B&PCs District Registries (as defined in paragraph 1.2 of Practice Direction 57AA)"; …
(c) apply …
(iii) in the B&PCs District Registries, to proceedings started on or after 25 February 2019, and will not apply to existing proceedings unless ordered by the court;
(2) Electronic Working is a permitted means of electronic delivery of documents to the court for the purposes of rule 1.46 of the Insolvency (England & Wales) Rules 2016 ("IR 2016")…
1.2
(1) Electronic Working works within and is subject to all statutory provisions and rules together with all procedural rules and practice directions applicable to the proceedings concerned, subject to any exclusion or revision within this Practice Direction.
Usage and operation of Electronic Working
2.1
Electronic Working enables parties to issue proceedings and file documents online 24 hours a day every day all year round, including during out of normal Court office opening hours and on weekends and bank holidays, except—
(a) [planned or] (b) [unplanned down time of the system]…; and
(c) where the filing is of a notice of appointment by a qualifying floating charge holder under Chapter 3 of Part 3 of the IR 2016 and the court is closed, in which case the filing must be in accordance with rule 3.20 of the IR 2016."
"8. Administrations
8.1 Attention is drawn to paragraph 2.1 of the Electronic Practice Direction 51O -The Electronic Working Pilot Scheme, … where a notice of appointment is made using the electronic filing system. For the avoidance of doubt, and notwithstanding the restriction in sub-paragraph (c) to notices of appointment made by qualifying floating charge holders, paragraph 2.1 of the Electronic Practice Direction 51O shall not apply to any filing of a notice of appointment of an administrator outside Court opening hours, and the provisions of Insolvency Rules 3.20 to 3.22 shall in those circumstances continue to apply."
"14 (1) The holder of a qualifying floating charge in respect of a company's property may appoint an administrator of the company…
18 (1) A person who appoints an administrator of a company under paragraph 14 shall file with the court-
(a) a notice of appointment, and
(b) such other documents as may be prescribed…
19 The appointment of an administrator under paragraph 14 takes effect when the requirements of paragraph 18 are satisfied."
Paras 22-31 contain provisions, which are similar for present purposes, for appointment by the members or directors of a company.
"Defined terms
… (2) In these Rules—
"file with the court" and similar expressions in these Rules means deliver to the court for filing…
"Practice Direction" means a direction as to the practice and procedure of a court within the scope of the CPR…
Electronic delivery of documents to the court
1.46.—(1) A document may not be delivered to a court by electronic means unless this is expressly permitted by the CPR, a Practice Direction, or these Rules.
(2) A document delivered by electronic means is to be treated as delivered to the court at the time it is recorded by the court as having been received or otherwise as the CPR, a Practice Direction or these Rules provide…
Notice of appointment
3.17.—(1) Notice of an appointment under paragraph 14 of Schedule B1 must be headed "Notice of appointment of an administrator by holder of a qualifying floating charge" and must contain… [(a)-(l)]
Filing of notice with the court
3.18.—(1) Three copies of the notice of appointment must be filed with the court, accompanied by… [(a)-(b)]…
(4) This rule is subject to rules 3.20 and 3.21 (appointment made out of court business hours).
Appointment taking place out of court business hours: procedure
3.20.—(1) When (but only when) the court is closed, the holder of a qualifying floating charge may file a notice of appointment with the court by—
(a) faxing it to a designated telephone number; or
(b) emailing it, or attaching it to an email, to a designated email address…
(9) The appointer must take to the court on the next occasion that the court is open for business—
(a) three copies of the faxed or emailed notice of appointment;
(b) the fax transmission report or hard copy required by paragraph (5);
(c) all supporting documents referred to in the notice in accordance with rule 3.21(1) which are in the appointer's possession; and
(d) a statement providing reasons for the out-of-hours filing of the notice of appointment, including why it would have been damaging to the company or its creditors not to have so acted.
Appointment taking place out of court business hours: legal effect
3.22.—(1) The filing of a notice in accordance with rule 3.20 has the same effect for all purposes as the filing of a notice of appointment in accordance with rule 3.18.
(2) The appointment—
(a) takes effect from the date and time of the fax transmission or sending of the email; but
(b) ceases to have effect if the requirements of rule 3.20(9) are not completed on the next occasion the court is open for business…"
i) It applies only to notices filed by a qualifying chargeholder (and so does not permit electronic filing by directors or members making an appointment)ii) It applies only "when the court is closed".
iii) It is very prescriptive about the email address or fax number that may be used. Those are plainly intended to be central addresses or fax numbers designated by the Lord Chancellor, not specific to a particular court, and accordingly the information required with the filing includes the name of the court having jurisdiction, no doubt so that the Lord Chancellor may distribute the filed information to the relevant courts on the next working day.
iv) R3.20(9) imposes a subsequent requirement to file various documents and a statement of reasons for use of the out of hours procedure, and to do so "on the next occasion that the court is open for business". This is backed up by a Draconian sanction; if not complied with when the court is next open, the appointment ceases to have effect. This appears to be an absolute requirement, and inflexible as to timing.
Resolution of the present case
"Formal defects
12.64. No insolvency proceedings will be invalidated by any formal defect or any irregularity unless the court before which objection is made considers that substantial injustice has been caused by the defect or irregularity and that the injustice cannot be remedied by any order of the court."
The use of electronic filing outside the permitted hours could be considered an "irregularity". It was clear in the circumstances that no injustice had been caused and an order curing the defect was appropriate in the circumstances (see para 14-19).