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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 >> State Bank of India & Ors v Mallya [2020] EWHC 96 (Ch) (09 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/96.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 96 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (Chd)
7 Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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STATE BANK OF INDIA BANK OF BARODA CORPORATION BANK THE FEDERAL BANK LIMITED IDBI BANK LIMITED INDIAN OVERSEAS BANK JAMMU & KASHMIR BANK LIMITED PUNJAB & SIND BANK PUNJAB NATIONAL BANK STATE BANK OF MYSORE UCO BANK UNITED BANK OF INDIA JM FINANCIAL ASSET RECONSTRUCTION CO.PVT.LTD |
Petitioners |
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- and - |
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DR VIJAY MALLYA |
Respondent |
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PHILIP MARSHALL QC AND JAMES MATHER (instructed by DWF LAW LLP) for the RESPONDENT
Hearing dates: 10 December 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Chief Insolvency and Companies Court Judge Briggs:
Introduction
The background in brief
The attachment orders
"The said claim of the sixth defendant cannot be accepted in view of section 31(b) of the RDDB & FI Act according to which the rights of secured creditors to realise secured debts due and payable to them by sale of assets over which security interest is created shall have priority and shall be paid in priority over all debts and government dues including revenues, taxes, cesses and rates due by them to the Central and State Government of any local authority. Further, even according to the 6th defendant, u/s 88 of Finance Act 1994, the claim of the sixth defendant will be subject to the banks claim. Hence, the claim of the sixth defendant for first charge over the charged assets of the defendants 1 to 3 is rejected and it is held that claim of the sixth defendant will be considered for distribution only as a second charge subject to the first charge of applicant banks being fully satisfied…"
"In the event of failure of defendants to pay the said OA amount, the applicant bank is at liberty to sell the hypothecated/mortgaged movables/immovables properties described in schedules to the main petition according to law…the Applicant Banks are also at liberty to proceed against the person and properties of the defendants 1 to 4 in execution proceedings."
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time being in force, the rights of secured creditors to realise secured debts due and payable to them by sale of assets over which security interest is created, shall have priority and shall be paid in priority over all other debts and Government dues including revenues, taxes…due to the Central Government, State Government or local authority".
"4. It is further submitted the Impugned Order was passed by the Adjudicating Authority inter alia confirming the Provisional Attachment Order dated 03.09.2016 passed by the Respondent No.1 in the criminal case bearing ECIR No. ECIR/07/MBZO/2016 inter alia attaching movable and immovable properties of the Respondent Nos. 2 to 5 are bad in law as the Appellants have prior right over the moveable and immovable properties of the Respondent Nos. 2 to 5 pursuant to the Personal Guarantee dated 21.12.2010, the Corporate Guarantee dated 21.12.2010 and the Final Order passed by the DRT on 19.01.2017 in O.A. No 766/2013 inter alia holding that the Respondent Nos 2 to 5 are jointly and severally liable to pay the OA amount and consequently by the Recovery Certificate in favour of the Appellants."
"I have gone through the application filed by the appellants for condonation of delay. This Tribunal is of the considered opinion that as a matter of fact, ED has failed to perform his duty not to implead the appellants (lenders) banks despite having full knowledge that the loan amounts have to be returned by Vijay Mallya and his associate company to the banks who are the mortgagees of the attached properties. One is failed to understand why have not done so when they were full aware. Thus, the prayer made in the application for condonation of delay is liable to be allowed as the sufficient cause has been shown…" (emphasis supplied)
"Earlier, the State Bank of India and other banks have appreciated the investigation of the ED and were also satisfied with the Provisional Attachment Order passed by the ED and the confirmation order. Once the State Bank of India and other banks have come to the notice that the ED may not agree to dispose of the properties by the banks (in view of the decree passed) till the completion of trial under Section 5(5) of the Act, the banks have decided to challenge the impugned order before this Tribunal…Therefore, it appears that in the present appeal, the banks are seeking the interim order. Admittedly, the trial may take a number of years in view of the nature of the case and bulky records. The banks are the secured creditors against the unpaid loans by the Vijay Mallya and his associate companies." (emphasis supplied).
"The amendment prima facie gives the Secured Creditor, a priority over the rights of Central or State Government or any other Local Authority. It is evident that the amendment has been introduced to facilitate the rights of the Secured Creditors which are being hampered by way of attachments of properties belonging to the Financial Institutions/Secured Creditors, done by/in favour of the Government institutions."
"The Respondent No 1 is not having any lien over the said properties as the Appellant banks are now the Legal Transferee of said properties".
"In view of facts and nature of the present case, I am of the opinion that once the banks are secured creditors and have obtained the final decree from the court which has attained finality, the banks are bound to receive the default loan amount from Vijay Mallya and his companies. He was/is active person of the companies. The loans amount has to be paid by the borrowers. It is a banks money. It must come to the banks..."
Security for the purpose of section 269 Insolvency Act 1986
"A foreign judgment which is final and conclusive on the merits and not impeachable under any of Rules 49 to 52 is conclusive as to any matter thereby adjudicated upon, and cannot be impeached for any error either of fact or law."
"The importance of compliance with s269 of the 1986 Act does not, however, lead to the automatic conclusion that a bankruptcy petition which fails to comply must be dismissed and cannot be cured by amendment. Neither the language of the section nor the underlying principles compel that result."
"[I]n Wave Lending Ltd v Parmar [2017] EWHC 681, [2019] BPIR 451, where Mr Martin Griffiths (sitting as a deputy High Court judge) allowed appeals from bankruptcy orders where the petitions had failed to comply with either of the limbs in s 269(1). It is submitted that the difference in outcome may be accounted for by the fact that the petitioner in Mogg appears to have included the correct gross figure for the debt but omitted to mention the security, whereas in Parmar the petition included only an estimated net balance, accompanied by a statement that no security was held, without reference either to the gross figure or the security, or any acknowledgment that the figure was a net figure."
Settlement offers
Adjournment- applicable principles
"The Court has a general power, if it appears to it appropriate to do so on the grounds that there has been a contravention of the rules or for any other reason, to dismiss a bankruptcy petition or to stay proceedings on such a petition; and where it stays proceedings on a petition, it may do so on such terms and conditions as it thinks fit."
"[72] I come finally to the question of discretion, and whether the Chief Registrar should have granted a further adjournment. There is no doubt that the Court retains a discretion not to make a bankruptcy order, even where the petition debt has been clearly established and any grounds of opposition have been dismissed. However, the authorities establish that in such circumstances the discretion to adjourn should only be exercised if there is a reasonable prospect of the petition debt being paid in full within a reasonable period: see Harrison v Seggar [2005] EWHC 411 (Ch), [2005] BPIR 583, at para [7] per Blackburne J, and Re Gilmartin (A Bankrupt) [1989] 1 WLR 513, at 516F–G, per Harman J. Furthermore, as Blackburne J said, "[t]here must be credible evidence to support such a prospect if the Court is to grant an adjournment for payment".[73] Accordingly, the first question is whether there was credible evidence before the Chief Registrar on 20 July to establish a reasonable prospect that the petition debts would be paid in full within a reasonable time. In my judgment there was not. In the context of the long-drawn out history of the petitions, and the adjournments which had already been granted, it seems to me that a reasonable time for payment in full of the petition debts could have been no more than a further 2 or 3 months at the most. There was no credible prospect of payment being received within such a timescale, because the offer of security contemplated that nothing would probably happen for at least 6 months, and the terminal loss claims were still inchoate and unsupported by any draft accounts. In view of the past history of delay and broken promises, it was in my judgment appropriate to take a fairly hard line and to accord priority to HMRC's undoubted prima facie right to obtain bankruptcy orders over protestations that a further adjournment might finally yield the payment in full which had so signally failed to materialise in the past. Furthermore, the Court would in my opinion have been justified in harbouring a suspicion that the predominant purpose of the adjournment, from the debtors' point of view, was to enable them to realise their assets at a time of their choosing in a difficult property market."
Application of principle
Conclusions
Postscript