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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 >> IV Fund Limited SAC v Mountain [2021] EWHC 2870 (Ch) (05 October 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/2870.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 2870 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
Rolls Building Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
B E T W E E N :
____________________
IV FUND LIMITED SAC |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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FRANK JAMES MOUNTAIN |
Respondent |
____________________
THE RESPONDENT did not attend and was not represented.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Judge Schaffer:
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
APPLICATION TO ADJOURN
"No judge is bound to accept expert evidence: even a proper medical report falls to be considered simply as part of the material as a whole (including the previous conduct of the case). [My emphasis]. The letter on which the appellant relies is wholly inadequate."
"While the court must recognise that litigants in person are not as used to the stresses of appearing in court as professional advocates, nevertheless something more than stress occasioned by the litigation will be needed to support an application for an adjournment. In cases where the applicant complains of stress-related illness, an adjournment is unlikely to serve any useful purpose because the stress will simply recur on an adjourned hearing."
THE LAW
"17(1) Subject to paragraph (4), a creditor who receives notification of a moratorium under these regulations may request that the debt advice provider who initiated the moratorium or (as the case may be) the debt advice provider to whom the debtor has been referred since the start of the moratorium reviews the moratorium to determine whether it should be continued or be cancelled in respect of some or all of the moratorium debts on one or both of the following grounds, namely that
(a) the moratorium unfairly prejudices the interests of the creditor, or
(b) there has been some material irregularity in relation to any of the matters specified in para.2.
(2) The matters in relation to which a creditor may request a review on the ground of material irregularity are that –
(a) the debtor did not meet the eligibility criteria when the application for the moratorium was made;
(b) the moratorium debt is not a qualifying debt; or
(c) the debtor has sufficient funds to discharge or liquidate their debt as it falls due.
(3) A request under paragraph (1) must be made within a period of 20 days, beginning on the day on which the moratorium started."
(4) and (5) …
(6) Any requests made under this regulation must
(a) be made in writing to the debtor's debt advice provider, and
(b) contain the following-
(1) the statement of the ground or grounds on which the review is requested ,and
(2) evidence which supports the statement.
18(1) Having received a request for a review in accordance with regulation 17, a debt advice provider must conduct the review and carry out the steps in paragraph (4) before the end of the period of 35 days beginning with –
(a) the day on which the moratorium started."
(b) …… …
(2) Subject to paragraph (3), having carried out the review in response to a request from a creditor, a debt advice provider must cancel a moratorium in respect of some or all of the moratorium debts if the debt advice provider considers that the creditor has provided sufficient evidence that-
(a) the moratorium unfairly prejudices the interests of the creditor or (b) there has been some material irregularity in relation to any of the matters specified in Regulation 17(2).
(3) A debt advice provider is not required to cancel a moratorium under paragraph (2) in respect of moratorium debt if the debt advice provider considers that the debtor's personal circumstances would make the cancellation unfair or unreasonable.
(4) The steps referred to in paragraph (1) are that a debt advice provider must -
(a) inform the creditor to request a review of the outcome of the review.
(b)…
19(1) If a debt advice provider has carried out a review of a moratorium following a request made by a creditor under regulation 17 and the moratorium has not been cancelled under regulation 18 in respect of some or all of the moratorium debts as a result, then the creditor may make an application to the county court on one or both of the grounds in regulation 17(1).
(2) An application under this regulation must be made before the end of the period of 50 days beginning with –
(a) the day on which the moratorium started or
(b) …
(3) Where on an application under this regulation the court is satisfied as to either of the grounds in regulation 17(1) it may do either or both of the following, namely –
(a) cancel the moratorium in relation to the moratorium debt owed to the creditor who made the application to the court,
(b) cancel the moratorium in respect of any other moratorium debt.
(4)…
(5) In any case where a court cancels a moratorium in relation to a moratorium debt under paragraph (3) or requires a debtor to pay interest fees or charges under paragraph (4), the court –
(a) may give such supplemental directions as it thinks fit and
(b) must notify the creditor, the debtor and the Secretary of State that the moratorium has been cancelled in relation to the moratorium debt."
"28(1) A mental health crisis moratorium is a moratorium under this part in respect of a debtor who is receiving mental health treatment.
(2) In these regulations, a debtor receiving mental health crisis treatment when the debtor,
(a)(b)(c)(d) …………….
(e) is receiving any other crisis, emergency or acute care or treatment in hospital or in the community from a specialist mental health service in relation to a mental health disorder of a serious nature.
(3) In this regulation, "specialist mental health service" means a mental health service provided by a crisis home treatment team, a liaison mental health team, a community mental health team, or any other specialist mental health crisis service.
29(1) Any of the following persons may submit an application to a debt advice provider for a mental health crisis moratorium in relation to a debtor - (a) the debtor.
(2) The application must include the following information –
(a) sufficient information to identify the debtor, and
(b) evidence from an approved mental health professional that the debtor is receiving mental health crisis treatment.
(3) For the purposes of paragraph (2)(b), evidence from an approved mental health professional must include the following
(a) sufficient information to identify the debtor,
(b) the name and contact details of the approved mental health professional,
(c) the name and contact details of the debtor's nominated point of contact,
(d) a declaration by the approved mental health professional that the debtor is receiving mental health crisis treatment, and
(e) a signed statement by the approved mental health professional that the evidence is, to the best of their knowledge and belief, correct.
(4) In addition to the information specified in paragraph (2), the application may include the following information where it is known by the person submitting the application, is relevant and has not already been provided in accordance with paragraph (2)(a) –
(a) the debtor's full name, date of birth and usual residential address,
(b) the trading name or names and address of any business carried on by the debtor,
(c) details of the debts to which the debtor is subject at the date of the application and the contact details of the creditors to whom each debt is owed, and
(d) details of any enforcement agent or other agent instructed by the creditor for the purposes of collection or enforcement of the debt including the agent's contact details.
30(1)…
30(2) Having considered an application for a mental health crisis moratorium, a debt advice provider must initiate a mental health crisis moratorium on behalf of the debtor if the debt advice provider considers that –
(a) the debtor meets the eligibility criteria in paragraph(3),
(b) the conditions in paragraph (4) are met, and
(c) the debts to be included in the moratorium are qualifying debts."
Paragraph 30(3) sets out the eligibility criteria referred to in paragraph 2(a) which are met by the debtor, so I will not recount them.
"(4) The conditions referred to in paragraph (2)(b) are that, in the light of the information provided in accordance with regulation 29(2) and (4) and any other information obtained by the debt advice provider –
(a) the debtor is unable, or is unlikely to be able, to repay some or all of the debt as it falls due,
(b) a mental health crisis moratorium would be appropriate, and
(c) an approved mental health professional has provided evidence that the debtor is receiving mental health crisis treatment.
(5) For the purposes of paragraph (4)(b), when considering whether a mental health crisis moratorium is appropriate, the debt advice provider (a) must consider whether the debtor has sufficient funds or income to discharge or liquidate their debt as it falls due, and
(b) may have regard to any other factor that the debt advice provider considers relevant."
Paragraph 31 I will not recount as the Regulation deals with the initiation of a mental health crisis moratorium by the Secretary of State and so is not relevant for the purposes of this application.
"32(1) A mental health crisis moratorium starts on the day following the day on which the Secretary of State causes an entry to be made on the register in accordance with regulation 31(2)(a).
(2) A mental health crisis moratorium ends on the earliest of –
(a) the end of the period of 30 days beginning with the day on which the debtor stops receiving mental health crisis treatment
(b) …
(c) the day on which the mental health crisis moratorium takes effect under regulations 18, 19 or 34.
33(1) Subject to paragraph(2), a debt advice provider must, before the end of the period of 30 days beginning with the day on which the moratorium started, request from the debtor's nominated point of contact –
(a) confirmation of whether the debtor is still receiving mental health crisis treatment, and
(b) if the debtor is no longer receiving mental health crisis treatment, confirmation of the date on which the treatment ended.
(2) The debt advice provider must not make the request to a nominated point of contact under paragraph (1) in the period of 20 days beginning with the day on which the moratorium started."
In addition to the regulations I have set out above, there is one authority to which I will need to refer to later in the course of this judgment.
THE APPLICATION
Regulation 19 to review the moratorium should be made to this court but with liberty to Mr Mountain to apply to set aside or vary no later than 14 days from service of that order upon him. No such application has been made by Mr Mountain.
THE CREDITOR'S SUBMISSIONS
MR MOUNTAIN'S SUBMISSIONS
MY CONCLUSIONS
21.1 The Creditor has complied with its obligations under the Regulations. It sought, on 2 September, within the 20 day period under Regulation 17(3), a review of the moratorium by the debt advice provider. That was declined without reasons being given under Regulation 18 and so this application was made and it, together with the order I handed down on 17 September, was served on the debt advice provider on 17 September.
21.2 The Creditor has serious concerns as to the circumstances in which this moratorium arose. Dismissing the application without analysing those concerns, which I will do, would be wrong. Nothing Mr Mountain has advanced convinces me to the contrary.
21.3 Mr Mountain originally put in place a Breathing Space Moratorium under the Regulations. This required the relevant debt advice provider to review the moratorium before the end of 35 days, beginning with the day that moratorium commenced. There is no evidence before this court that this was undertaken.
21.4 Mr Mountain was under an obligation under the first moratorium to inform his first debt advice provider if there was any change to his circumstances or financial position (see Regulation 16(2)(a)). There is no evidence he did so and one can only conclude that nothing has happened in the first 60-day period. That is plainly unsatisfactory and I will return to that point later in this judgment.
21.5 Mr Mountain changed his debt advice provider for the purposes of the mental health crisis moratorium. There was no explanation as to why he did so. I accept he was entitled to take that course, but the court does not know why he did so.
21.6 The Creditor submits this moratorium must be viewed in the context of the background of delay. It is unarguable that there has been delay. Whether that is a relevant factor to set aside the moratorium is not the issue under this head, namely, should the application proceed but it is a relevant factor in determining whether this court should look with a critical eye at the application given the historical background.
HAS THERE BEEN A MATERIAL IRREGULARITY?
Regulation 17(2)(b). What the Creditor submits is that Regulation 17(2)(c) is not met as Mr Mountain, by his own admission, has sufficient funds to discharge or liquidate the debt under Regulation 17(2)(c). I do not agree. The evidence as to payment is, at best, equivocal. Mr Mountain's evidence on payment is not so much based on funds being immediately available, but on reasonable time being provided to raise funds for payment. At the moment, there is no evidence advanced to show an ability to pay now. I therefore conclude that there are no grounds based on material irregularity made out and I therefore dismiss that objection advanced by the Creditor.
HAS THERE BEEN UNFAIR PREJUDICE?
"32. I accept that unfairness is to be assessed objectively, and that this will require the court to embark upon a balancing exercise. I further accept that, where the moratorium discriminates unfairly between creditors, so that the impact on one is significantly more severe than on another, that may well be a proper basis on which the court can say that the moratorium "unfairly prejudices" the applicant creditor. But I also accept that the phrase "unfairly prejudices" should not be confined to that. These are ordinary English words, undefined in the legislation, and not obviously terms of art. They can properly be understood to go wider.
33. On the other hand, I am not going to try to lay down any firm guidelines for the future. It is too early in the life of the Regulations to do that. So, how much further these words go, and in what direction, will have to be determined on a case-by-case basis. That is, after all, how the common law (and for that matter the classical Roman law) developed: decide individual cases first, and infer a principle from the results later. So, I am going to focus particularly on the facts of this case."
"The second point is this. It is one thing to balance the interests of one creditor against another. It is another thing entirely to balance the interests of the creditor against those of the debtor: they are chalk and cheese. How does one tell at what level the amount of money that the creditor stands to lose justifies imposing the risk upon the debtor of further harm to his or her mental health? The answer may be that, like the elephant, you will know it when you see it. It is after all no objection to say, you do not know exactly where the line is to be drawn, as long as you can say, in a given case, that that case is either one side or the other of any reasonably drawn line: see e.g., Wood v Wood [1947] P 103, 106, per Lord Merriman P. Any uncertainties in a given case can be resolved by resort to the burden of proof."
"If this is not provided [I interpose to explain he was referring to the medical evidence] it will be very difficult to assess the debtor's interests for the purposes of any balancing exercise. If the patient is likely to respond to treatment within a short time and return to normal, that is a quite different situation from one in which the health problems are more intractable and will take a considerable time to resolve, or indeed may never be resolved."
27.1 At a hearing in December 2020, the Chancery Judge rejected an application to adjourn made by Mr Mountain on the grounds of being medically unfit;
27.2 In the medical evidence now produced to this court, which I shall address in rather more detail later in this judgment, it is apparent that Mr Mountain was receiving medical treatment in December 2020;
27.3 Permission to appeal that judge's decision to the Court of Appeal was sought on a number of grounds and had to be undertaken on Mr Mountain's instructions. As I earlier said, part of that appeal for which permission to proceed was given by Nugee LJ and which is of a far more complex nature, continues to be pursued by Mr Mountain as a litigant-in-person;
27.4 Mr Mountain has been perfectly able to instruct solicitors and counsel since mid- December 2020, advancing defences to the bankruptcy petition since February 2021 and appealing adverse decisions to the Chancery Judge even though the medical evidence is that he was under supervision medically at that time;
27.5 The urgency of the bankruptcy petition was recognised by this court in February 2021. A challenge to that expedition order was rejected by the judge. It appears that although it is said that Mr Mountain remained under medical supervision at that time, no medical issues were raised as a discrete ground to that challenge;
27.6 His mental health did not impair him to make a substantive witness statement on 11 February 2021 in defending the petition consisting of 22 paragraphs and 168 pages of exhibits;
27.7 His mental health did not impair him to consider a lengthy witness statement made on behalf of the Creditor consisting of 73 paragraphs and over 1,000 page of exhibits on 15 February 2021 and prepare a detailed witness statement in answer on 11 March 2021 consisting of 58 paragraphs and 73 pages of exhibits;
27.8 His mental health did not impair Mr Mountain in filing a third witness statement on 17 May 2021 consisting of 18 paragraphs and 81 pages of exhibits which he accepts he prepared (see paragraphs 13 and para.14 of that witness statement);
27.9 His mental health did not impair him in filing a fourth witness statement on 1 June consisting of 20 paragraphs and 592 pages of exhibits;
27.10 His mental health did not impair him seeking to try to re-finance various corporate developments this year to fund the discharging of the petition debt (see paragraph 13 of Mr Mountain's third witness statement in May 2021 and paragraphs 5 and 6 of his fourth witness statement in June); clearly, his mental health at those times posed no impediment to his involvement in that process.
27.11 His mental health did not impair him to seek a Breathing Space Moratorium, not, I note, a mental health crisis moratorium, notwithstanding what is said to be his mental state at that time in June of this year, which he clearly did alone. His solicitors confirmed in a letter to the court dated 11 June that he did this without reference to them, they having been notified by Mr Mountain of this late the previous afternoon of 10 June;
27.12 His mental health did not impair him subsequently seeking a mental health crisis moratorium on 13 August having discharged his solicitors to act in person. His solicitors filed notice of change with this court on 11 August;
27.13 The medical evidence filed as ordered by me is wholly inadequate. By my order of 17 September, I asked for four things. (i) production of medical evidence which supported Mr Mountain's original application for a moratorium- that has not been produced; (ii) the duration of his treatment - the medical note with which I will deal with below blandly says that Mr Mountain has been under care since December 2020; (iii) the severity of his condition - that has not been provided; (iv) prognosis and timescale for improvement - that has not been provided. The undated note sent to this court by the community mental health nurse's summary states that Mr Mountain has seen a mental health consultant on two occasions for assessment and medication review, that Mr Mountain is following a treatment plan, that Mr Mountain is not well enough to attend court and that he should remain within the moratorium until his "mental health has significantly improved". That note raises a number of questions. (1) Why was a report not provided by the consultant who has seen Mr Mountain. With all respect to the community nurse, the quality of that evidence produced to the court is important (see my comments above when referring to the decision of Norris J in Levy v Ellis-Carr); (2) The medical evidence is very limited. As Mr Davenport contends, where is there evidence of what precisely is Mr Mountain's mental health condition? Generalities about diagnostic assessment, medication review and treatment plan will simply not do. Mr Mountain cannot hide behind confidentiality when the court has expressly ordered disclosure; (3) What does "significant improvement" mean? Even here, Mr Mountain has been able to prepare a 3-page coherent note outlining his objections to the stance taken by the Creditor;
27.14 Bankruptcy is a class action. Whilst the Regulations refer to creditor in the singular, there is no doubt in my view that the moratorium put in place to stay a class action for the benefit of all creditors is entirely different to a moratorium put in place to stop discrete proceedings by one creditor against a debtor. The prejudice here is to all creditors.
29.1 the court made clear that the petition must be determined expeditiously.
29.2 where the petition has already been delayed by earlier adjournments for one reason or another since the first hearing before me over six months ago.
29.3 where Mr Mountain, by experienced counsel, has already completed his submissions to me that first day, save for the issue of reasonable time to pay.
29.4 where a detailed skeleton argument on Mr Mountain's behalf has already been filed by that counsel with the court over the period of the adjournment (and which of course I will carefully consider) and
29.5 where the medical evidence offers no prognosis which can give the court any comfort whatsoever as to when this court will be finally determined, I am completely persuaded that, in accordance with the overriding objective, the balance lies very clearly with the hearing of the petition now resuming. There must be no delay in this matter.
Transcribed by Opus 2 International Limited Official Court Reporters and Audio Transcribers 5 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3BF Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737 [email protected] |