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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 >> Hood v JD Classics Ltd (In Administration) [2020] EWHC 3232 (Ch) (27 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/3232.html Cite as: [2021] BPIR 274, [2020] WLR(D) 664, [2021] Ch 125, [2021] 2 WLR 313, [2020] EWHC 3232 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN BANKRUPTCY
ON APPEAL FROM AN ORDER OF DEPUTY JUDGE JONES DATED 28 FEBRUARY 2020
IN THE MATTER OF DEREK THOMAS HOOD (A DEBTOR)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DEREK THOMAS HOOD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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JD CLASSICS LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION) |
Respondent |
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Felicity Toube QC and Adam Al-Attar (instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquhart and Sullivan UK LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 11 November 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Michael Green:
Introduction
The facts
(1) The payment of £470,000 by Mrs Hood was a gift by her for the benefit of her ex-husband "and, as third party funds, is not liable to be voided under s284" [65];
(2) The payment of £530,000 by Mr Hill was from his own funds and the Appellant had no interest in such funds. The payment was made unconditionally by Mr Hill, in the sense that it was not conditional on the petition being dismissed. Mr Hill did not assert that there was any trust of the monies and it was simply a transfer of funds by him;
(3) The payment by Mr Hill was however to be treated as a loan by him to the Appellant "to be repaid or reimbursed" [73].
Relevant Statutory provisions
"(1) The court shall not make a bankruptcy order on a creditor's petition unless it is satisfied that the debt, or one of the debts, in respect of which the petition was presented is either –
(a) a debt which, having been payable at the date of the petition or having since become payable, has been neither paid nor secured or compounded for, or
(b) a debt which the debtor has no reasonable prospect of being able to pay when it falls due."
"(3) The court may dismiss the petition if it is satisfied that the debtor is able to pay all his debts or is satisfied –
(a) that the debtor has made an offer to secure or compound for a debt in respect of which the petition is presented,
(b) that the acceptance of that offer would have required the dismissal of the petition, and
(c) that the offer has been unreasonably refused;
and, in determining for the purposes of this subsection whether the debtor is able to pay all his debts, the court shall take into account his contingent and prospective liabilities."
"I think that in exercising discretion the court must keep in view the evident purpose of the section which, as Chitty J said in In re Civil Service and General Store Ltd, 58 L.T. 220, 221, is to ensure that the creditors are paid pari passu."
"(1) Subject as follows, a bankrupt's estate for the purposes of any of this Group of Parts comprises –
(a) all property belonging to or vested in the bankrupt at the commencement of the bankruptcy, and
(b) any property which by virtue of any of the following provisions of this Part is comprised in that estate or is treated as falling within the preceding paragraph.
…
(3) Subsection (1) does not apply to -
(a) property held by the bankrupt on trust for any other person…".
"money, goods, things in action, land and every description of property wherever situated and also obligations and every description of interest, whether present or future or vested or contingent, arising out of, or incidental to, property".
"(1) Where a person is made bankrupt, any disposition of property made by that person in the period to which this section applies is void except to the extent that it is or was made with the consent of the court, or is or was subsequently ratified by the court.
(2) Subsection (1) applies to a payment (whether in cash or otherwise) as it applies to a disposition of property and, accordingly, where any payment is void by virtue of that subsection, the person paid shall hold the sum paid for the bankrupt as part of his estate.
(3) This section applies to the period beginning with the day of the making of the bankruptcy application or (as the case may be) the presentation of the bankruptcy petition and ending with the vesting, under Chapter IV of this Part, of the bankrupt's estate in a trustee.
…
(6) A disposition of property is void under this section notwithstanding that the property is not or, as the case may be, would not be comprised in the bankrupt's estate; but nothing in this section affects any disposition made by a person or property held by him on trust for any other person."
"[44] In Re Palmer (Deceased) (A Debtor) [1994] Ch 316 (reversed on appeal, but not on this point) Vinelott J concluded that s 284 had a similar effect to the application of the old doctrine of relation back:
'section 284 has a dual effect. First it supplements the relation back of the trustee's title by avoiding dispositions after the date of presentation of the petition. Secondly, it protects dispositions after the presentation of the petition and before the appointment of the trustee which fall within subsections (4) and (5); to that extent it reflects (though it is not coterminous with) section 45 of the Bankruptcy Act 1914' (at 334C-D).
[45] In my judgment, the effect of ss 278, 283, 284 and 306 of the Insolvency Act 1986 was that, in the present case, as from the transfer date, the first appellant held the legal title to the shares on the following trusts:
(i) contingently for the bankrupt in the event that a bankruptcy order was indeed made against him; and
(ii) subject thereto (ie in the event that no such order was made), for himself as absolute owner of both the legal and beneficial title."
"[10] …Plainly a 'payment' could also be 'a disposition of property' falling within s 284(1), since by virtue of s 436 of the 1986 Act the expression 'property' includes money. But the question is: must it be so? The language of the subsection certainly appears to proceed on the basis that a 'payment' may be something different from a 'disposition', for the purpose of subs (2) is to say that subs (1) applies to a 'payment' as it applies to a 'disposition'…
[12] …in order to give content to the subsection I consider one must simply focus upon its very words: s 284(2) relates to 'payments' properly so described. I attempt no complete definition of that term. But in general 'payment' is the process by which money (or some acceptable substitute) passes from one to another and a 'payment' is the money or value that is the subject of that process. Since the subsection does not qualify the term 'payment' in anyway it relates to 'payments' whether or not they involve a disposition of property (in the sense that that has been treated on this appeal viz the transfer of beneficial title). The accountant received a 'payment' properly so described (a cheque drawn in his favour that was met on presentation) and the statutory consequence is that he is to be treated as holding it for the bankrupt as part of his estate. That statutory assumption replaces the express bare trust which the accountant says arose, and the money he received must be dealt with according to the regime imposed by the Insolvency Act 1986 consequent upon such payment and not the law of private trusts."
"(1) On the hearing of the petition, a person who has delivered notice under rule 10.19 of intention to appear at the hearing, may apply to the court for an order giving that person carriage of the petition in place of the petitioner, but without requiring any amendment of the petition.
(2) The court may, on such terms as it thinks just, make a change of carriage order if satisfied that—
(a) the applicant is an unpaid and unsecured creditor of the debtor or a member State liquidator appointed in main proceedings in relation to the debtor; and
(b) the petitioner either—
(i) intends by any means to secure the postponement, adjournment, dismissal or withdrawal of the petition, or
(ii) does not intend to prosecute the petition, either diligently or at all.
(3) The court must not make such an order if satisfied that the petitioner's debt has been paid, secured or compounded by means of—
(a) a disposition of property made by some person other than the debtor; or
(b) a disposition of the debtor's own property made with the approval of, or ratified by, the court."
Smith v Simpson (supra)
"I am content to proceed on the basis (a) that the tender of the banker's draft was equivalent to a tender of cash, and (b) that in the circumstances, as accepted by Mr Whitaker, the cash is to be treated as belonging to the debtor."
That concession was also recorded in Evans LJ's judgment at p.255B.
"For the sake of simplicity references hereafter to payment by the debtor mean payment by the debtor out of his own property, and include a securing of, or compounding for, the petition debt which involves a disposition of the debtor's own property. Similarly, references hereafter to payment by a third party mean payment otherwise than out of the debtor's own property, and include a securing of, or compounding for, the petition debt which does not involve a disposition of the debtor's own property…
On the debtor's construction section 271(1) is inconsistent with the Rules in that whereas section 271(1) makes no express distinction between payment by the debtor and payment by a third party, rules 6.31 and 6.32 do make such a distinction. In particular rule 6.31(3) provides expressly that the court shall not make a change of carriage order if it is satisfied that the petition debt has been paid by a third party. It is clearly implicit in this provision that the court may make a change of carriage order where there has been payment by the debtor. If the debtor's construction of section 271(1) is right, therefore, rule 6.31(3) is to that extent ultra vires and of no effect…
In my judgment, to construe section 271(1) in the manner contended for by the debtor would result in section 271(1) being inconsistent not only with rules 6.31 and 6.32 but also with section 284(1). Further, such a construction would run counter to the scheme and policy of the Act to which I have referred. Section 284(1) renders "any" disposition of the debtor's property made after the date of presentation of the petition voidable, in the sense that it will be avoided on the making of a bankruptcy order unless validated by the court. It is, in my judgment, inconsistent with that provision, as with the scheme and policy of the Act, that the debtor should be in a position to bring the petition to an end by paying the petition debt, in the face of supporting creditors desirous of seeking a bankruptcy order. To use Farwell LJ's expression in Brook v Emerson, 95 LT 821, 823, that would, in my judgment, be contrary to the spirit of the Act.
Nor, in my judgment, does the express wording of section 271(1) compel the construction contended for by the debtor. The subsection provides that the court shall not make a bankruptcy order unless it is satisfied that the debt "has been neither paid nor secured or compounded for". In my judgment, what the subsection is referring to, when read in context, is a payment which is unconditional in the sense that it is not liable to be avoided in the event that a bankruptcy order is made: that is to say a payment which is not vulnerable to the operation of section 284(1). If section 271(1) is construed in that way, it is consistent with section 284(1), with the Rules and with the scheme and policy of the Act. By contrast, if the debtor's construction is correct section 271(1) would have the, to my mind, surprising effect that the jurisdiction of the court to make a bankruptcy order is removed by a disposition which would be liable to be avoided under section 284(1) had a bankruptcy order been made on the petition."
"I am not at all clear why payment by means of a banker's draft, which constitutes the bank's personal undertaking to pay the debt from its own resources, counts as a disposition of property made by the debtor out of his own funds, although any disposition made by him to the bank would clearly be avoided under section 284(1) if it took place during the relevant period. However I respect the judgment of the Divisional Court in In Re Salaman (A Bankrupt) (1983) 127 SJ 763, and Mr Whitaker accepted that the draft should be regarded as the debtor's own funds."
The Judgment below
"42. What I draw from the above is that where a third party makes a payment from his own funds but the debtor has agreed to repay or reimburse the third party, it is equivalent to a payment from the debtor's own funds because, absent a trust, it is merely substituting one debt for another one, leaving the debtor in the same position. A true third party payment, it seems to me, is one which leaves the debtor in a better financial position as there are more potential assets in the pot to pay any other creditors. An arrangement which leaves the debtor in the same position, but would result in the dismissal of a petition, breaches the pari passu principle by preferring an existing creditor above others in breach of the essential intention of the Act.
43 It is asserted that because the payments made by Mr Hill and Mrs Hood were made directly to the creditor from their own money, it cannot be a disposition of property or a payment of the debtor's own property such as to trigger s284. That cannot be correct in the light of In re Salaman or generally. Merely because something does not come into the hands of an individual does not mean that it does not belong to them or does not amount to their property. Legal ownership or possession by one person does not preclude equitable ownership by another. Indeed, this principle is specifically recognised in s284(6) which excludes payments made from property held on trust by the debtor."
(i) substituting one debt for another leaves the debtor in the same position;
(ii) a true third party payment should leave the debtor in a better position;
(iii) an arrangement whereby the debtor was left in the same position but resulted in the dismissal of the petition would breach the pari passu principle;
(iv) the fact that there was a direct payment by Mr Hill to HMRC does not mean that the property from which the payment was made does not belong to the Appellant.
"There was no doubt in the minds of the court that a banker's draft was to be treated as the debtor's own property, although the funds were drawn directly from the issuing bank rather than made from the debtor's own bank account."
I am not entirely clear what the Judge meant by that and Jonathan Parker J stated expressly that it was being treated as the debtor's own funds because she had conceded that. Furthermore, Evans LJ did not think that a banker's draft should be regarded as the debtor's own property.
The grounds of appeal
(1) A payment by way of gift;
(2) A loan from the third party where the debtor is not returned to solvency;
(3) A proper refinancing where the debtor is returned to solvency.
Is the loan from Mr Hill the Appellant's "property"?
"It is clear to me that this was the money of the bankrupt, and that it was paid by the solicitor as his money for the purpose of obtaining a delay of the bankruptcy proceedings…They [the lending company] never meant to lend without looking to somebody to repay them. The money was lent to Snyder and was not lent to the five gentlemen, and the consequence of that is that the trustee is entitled to succeed in this application".
"In my opinion the true result of the evidence is not that the money paid to Bromley [the creditor] was the bankrupt's money, but that the bankrupt through his solicitors paid his debt with money lent him for the purpose by Mozley [the moneylender]…The payment cannot be impeached by the trustee if the above conclusion is correct in fact. The trustee is endeavouring to affirm the transaction in part and to repudiate it in part. He wants to claim the money as the bankrupt's because it came to his hands and at the same time to reject the terms and conditions on which alone the bankrupt procured it. This is manifestly unjust and contrary to principle…I entertain no doubt that Mozley could have obtained an injunction to restrain the bankrupt from using that money for any purpose except that of paying his pressing creditors. If this be so, the money never was the bankrupt's in any proper sense so as to vest in his trustee as part of his general assets."
"All that I have to consider is, whether this money, which was paid to the bank, was the money of the debtor or not…if the 300l. ever became the debtor's money, it is plain that he had the right to spend it, or to speculate with it, or do whatever he pleased with it. But what I find is, that it never came into debtor's hands at all; and I am of opinion that it never was intended to come into his hands. It is quite clear that [the solicitors] would never have consented to that money going out of their hands into the debtor's hands, or being applied for any purpose whatever other than the dismissal of the petition by the bank… I cannot help thinking that this money was never free, and never became part of the general assets of the debtor at all. He never had any right to receive it, or use it, or apply it to any purpose except this one particular purpose. Under these circumstances it seems to me it was impressed with a trust – not in the strict sense of the word – but in substance with a quasi-trust that it should be applied by [the solicitors] out of their own money for the discharge pro tanto of the claim of the bank."
The Court of Appeal – [1902] 2 KB 237 – dismissed the trustee's appeal. Romer LJ said:
"In my view there never was a moment of time at which this money could have been used for any other purpose than that of paying the bank."
"To my mind the resolution of the issue raised by this appeal turns on a consideration of the relevant evidence that was put before the court. On this appeal the court is concerned to ascertain what were the precise terms of the arrangement made between the debtor and Mr Collis (the third party who provided the £5,000 in question). Those are the terms which are of crucial importance in determining whether that sum was an asset of the debtor."
No evidence was given by the third party or the debtor and the court only had three letters from the third party on which to base its factual findings. Nicholls J set out those letters and then concluded simply as follows:
"…I think that on the evidence before him the learned Judge came to the right conclusion and that that evidence does not entitle, or enable, this court to reach the conclusion either that the transaction was not one of loan, or that being one of loan the sum loaned was impressed with a trust."
Walton J agreed with Nicholls J. He also referred to In Re Rogers saying that it may need reconsideration.
Does the pari passu principle govern the operation of the sections?
"(6) On principle however the acts of the bank in honouring cheques drawn on a company's overdrawn account constitute (i) loans of the sums in question by the bank to the company and (ii) payment by the bank as agent of the company of the sums loaned as moneys of the company to the party in whose favour the cheques are drawn. On this analysis, the loan by the bank to the company is not a disposition of the company's money (it is a disposition of the bank's money to the company) and is therefore outside section 127; but the payment by the bank as agent for the company's money does constitute a disposition to the payee by the company within section 127 and is recoverable by the liquidator from the payee."
Conclusion