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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 >> Supercapital Ltd, Re Insolvency Act 1986 [2020] EWHC 1685 (Ch) (29 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1685.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1685 (Ch) |
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7 The Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF SUPERCAPITAL LTD | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 |
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Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
Joint Administrators of Supercapital Limited ( 'the Company'). The application sought directions and approval of the proposed distribution plan in relation to sums held by the Company on what the Applicant considers is a statutory trust for clients arising under the Payment Services Regulations 2017 ( 'the PSRs'). The application seeks directions for approval of the proposed distribution plan as well as approving the Administrators' remuneration, costs and expenses.
Background
Company's general assets. As is set out in the evidence, the Company holds the sum of approximately £12.6 million. This has been calculated as being a shortfall of approximately £585,000 to the clients, excluding the costs of the work carried out by the Joint Administrators. According to Mr Goldfarb, the shortfall appears to arise from a number of duplicate payments which had been made and which to date have not been recovered from the recipients. The prospect of recovery of these sums is uncertain.
Administrators have carried out considerable work to obtain a clear picture of the clients' entitlements. Mr Goldfarb states that the company books and records did not themselves provide a clear picture. According to Mr Goldfarb, he has been able to obtain with some confidence an accurate picture of the sums owing allowing him to reconcile the Company's records. This will allow him to be in a position to distribute under the terms of Distribution Plan.
The status of the sums held by the Administrators
"23(1) - For the purposes of this regulation "relevant funds" comprise the following:
(a) sums received from, or for the benefit of, a payment service user for the execution of a payment transaction; and
(b) sums received from a payment service provider for the execution of a payment transaction on behalf of a payment service user.
[ ]
23(5) - An authorised payment institution must keep relevant funds segregated from any other funds that it holds.
[ ]
23(8) - No person other than the authorised payment institution may have any interest in or right over the relevant funds or relevant assets placed in an account in accordance with paragraph (6)(a) or (b) except as provided by this regulation.
[ ]
23(11) - The authorised payment institution must keep a record of:
(a) any relevant funds segregated in accordance with paragraph (5); [ ]
23(14) - Subject to paragraph (15), where there is an insolvency event:
(a) the claims of payment service users are to be paid from the asset pool in priority to all other creditors; and
(b) until all the claims of payment service users have been paid, no right of set-off or security right may be exercised in respect of the asset pool except to the extent that the right of set-off relates to fees and expenses in relation to operating an account held in accordance with paragraph (6)(a) or (b), (9) or (12)(b).
23(15) - The claims referred to in paragraph (14)(a) shall not be subject to the priority of expenses of an insolvency proceeding except in respect of the costs of distributing the asset pool.
[ ]
23(17) - An authorised payment institution (and any small payment institution which voluntarily safeguards relevant funds) must maintain organisational arrangements sufficient to minimise the risk of the loss or diminution of relevant funds or relevant assets through fraud, misuse, negligence or poor administration."
'Role of trust law
"The question of implication arises when the instrument does not expressly provide for what is to happen when some event occurs. The most usual inference in such a case is that nothing is to happen. If the parties had intended something to happen, the instrument would have said so."
442 , which may be applicable. There are also the maxims of equity, such as "equality is equity". This has frequently been applied by the courts to the distribution of assets upon the dissolution of a body or fund: see, for example, In re Bucks Constabulary Widows' and Orphans' Fund Friendly Society (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 936 (a friendly society).
"client money" even if they have not been paid into the house accounts.
74. Needless to say, if a client were only to have a share in a collective claim as a result of the firm paying money into a house account, that would have provided an argument for the claims of those clients being added to the client money pool and those clients being included in those entitled to claim on the client money pool.
9. In Lehman, the Court of Appeal considered the provisions under CASS 7 which made an express declaration of trust, but did not, as set out by Lady Justice Arden, thereafter provide any further provision as to the operation of the trust. Trust law will be used to enable such trusts to be operated for the benefit of the beneficiaries. In relation to the PSR, Mr Mather informed me that to date, there has been no case which has considered the rules in relation to the PSRs and whether the provisions, the relevant extracts of which I have set out above, create a statutory trust. There are in my judgment, many similarities as between the PSRs and CASS 7, save that CASS 7 makes an express declaration of trust. That in in itself of course is not determinative, merely an indication that many of the provisions set out in the PSRs are those one would expect to see in the event that a statutory trust is created. The consideration of the relevant provisions is as follows :-
(1) In regulation 23, the focus of the 'relevant funds' in its definition in 23(1)(a) is about identifying funds received for the benefit of third parties, in particular those who have an interest in such funds, whether received from a 'payment service user', or from a 'payment service provider' for the execution of a payment on behalf of a payment service user.
(2) Regulation 23(5) states that such funds must be kept segregated from any other funds held by the authorised payment institution. Such an obligation is inconsistent, as Mr Mather submits, with a creditor debtor relationship which would enable such funds to be used by the company as part of its business. I agree.
(3) Regulation 23(11) requires the authorised payment institution to keep a record of any relevant funds segregated. This alongside regulation 23(5) demonstrates that such funds are not to be treated as company funds. Additionally, this segregation is to occur immediately upon the receipt of the funds.
(4) Regulation 23(8) prohibits any persons other than the authorised payment institution from having an interest over the relevant funds or relevant assets placed in an account in accordance with paragraph (6)(a) or (b). Those latter provisions relate to the position when sums are received at a time when it is not possible to place them into the segregated fund. This again indicates that the funds are to be treated at all times as separate, from the moment of receipt, from sums which belong to the company.
(5) Regulation 23(14) deals with the position upon the occurrence of an insolvency event and states that all the claims of payment service users 'are to be paid from the asset pool in priority to all other creditors'. Although the potential beneficiaries of a trust seem to be referred to as 'creditors' their position, in my judgment, is distinguishable from creditors in general because of the entitlement to claim in relation to the pooled assets. This in many respects goes somewhat further in the content of the regulations than those found in CASS 7.
Jurisdiction of the Court
These are two cases where the Judges considered the exercise of the 'directions' jurisdiction as well as accepting in both cases that the court also had the ability to utilise its inherent jurisdiction. Both of these cases related to applications seeking directions relating to a distribution plan proposed in relation to the sums held on trust and in the hands of the office holder.
Again this was a case seeking a process for determining the interests in the trust and the proposed distribution. In relation to the inherent jurisdiction also relied upon by Mr Mather, there is a useful passage in the judgment of Mr Justice David Richards (as he then was) in the case Re MF Global UK Ltd ( in special administration ) (No 3) [2013] EWHC 1655 (Ch). These were relied upon by HH Judge Keyser in Re Allanfield Properties and I set out the discussion and relevant passages from MF Global therein,
'52.The inherent equitable jurisdiction was considered by David Richards J in In re
MF Global UK Ltd (in special administration) (No. 3) [2013] EWHC 1655 (Ch), [2013] 1 WLR 3874 . The company was a failed investment bank and held client moneys on statutory trusts pursuant to CASS 7 and CASS 7A. The special administrators applied for directions to enable them to distribute in circumstances where there was uncertainty as to the extent of valid claims against the trust pool. Very considerable difficulties would have attended an attempt to defer distribution until the extent of all valid individual claims was known: see in particular [9] and [13]. David Richards J referred to the comment of Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury MR in In re Lehman Bros International (Europe) (No. 2) [2010] Bus LR 489 at [86]:
"I hope, indeed I would expect, that, if the administrators decide to make an application under the Trustee Acts or pursuant to the court's inherent equitable jurisdiction, in relation to dealing with beneficiaries' rights, the court will provide effective assistance, by arriving at a practical and fair outcome, while ensuring that delay and costs are kept to a minimum."
David Richards J summarised the scheme proposed for his approval as set out in a draft order and said at [21]:
"The order does not purport to vary the beneficial interests of any clients and, accordingly, provides that the exclusion of any claimant from such a distribution is without prejudice to their right to participate in any subsequent distribution from the client money trust, if they duly establish their claim, and is also without prejudice to any tracing or similar remedy that might be available to them."
Having indicated that the proposed scheme gave all potential claimants a proper opportunity to make their claims before distribution, the judge considered the scope of the inherent equitable jurisdiction in relation to trusts. At [26] he said:
"The inherent jurisdiction of the court does not enable the court to vary beneficial interests in trust property but, as part of the jurisdiction to supervise and administer trusts, it permits the court to give directions to trustees to distribute trust property on particular bases when the court is satisfied it is just and expedient to do so. A well established example of the exercise of the jurisdiction in this respect is the making of In re Benjamin orders: In re Benjamin [1902] 1 Ch 723 . In those cases where the trustees are faced with a practical difficulty in establishing the existence of possible beneficiaries or other claimants, the court will give a direction to the trustees enabling them to distribute the trust property on an assumption of fact that there is no such beneficiary or claimant. As Nourse J explained in In re Green's Will Trust [1985] 3 All ER 455 , 462, an In re Benjamin order does not vary or destroy beneficial interests but merely enables trust property to be distributed according to the practical probabilities. It protects trustees but it equally preserves the right of any person who establishes a beneficial interest to pursue such remedies as may be available to them."
14. In my judgment, there is clear authority set out in these cases establishing that the Court does have jurisdiction. Mr Justice Norris was of the firm view in Re Prichard Stockbrokers that the jurisdiction is based upon paragraph 63, although I confess a slight preference to considering it under the Court's inherent jurisdiction. For current purposes, there is clear jurisdiction and I turn to consider the directions being sought.
The proposed directions
15. The proposed distribution plan effectively seeks to treat all those who claim to be beneficiaries in the same way, namely on a pari passu basis. The Plan provides detailed rules in relation to proving of claims, appeals therefrom and being able to make interim distributions as well as dealing with retentions pending resolution of any issues. Mr Mather makes the point that the proposed Plan is similar to the one approved in the case of Worldspreads limited [2015] EWHC 1719 ( Ch) and MF Global. Having considered the terms of the Plan and directed a few amendments so that it is clear to the beneficiaries that all their claims are to be distributed on a pari passu basis, I will make the directions sought. As stated above the issue as to remuneration is adjourned to another hearing date.
Dated