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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 >> A Company, Re [2022] EWHC 943 (Ch) (19 April 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/943.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 943 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF A COMPANY
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AND INSOLVENCY ACT 2020
Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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A Company |
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Mr James Egan (instructed by Photiades Solicitors Ltd) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 April 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Deputy ICC Judge Baister:
Introduction
The petition
The first issue
The second issue
(a) A letter of 14 February 2022 from the company's accountants, H A S Thompson & Co, confirming that it was "significantly affected in March 2020 right on until October 2020" and a cashflow, the significance of which, he says, speaks for itself.
(b) Recourse by the company to the government furlough scheme.
(c) Evidence from Mr G, the director of the company, that the company had traded successfully until it was affected by Covid-19 and his statement that "The Company works in the construction industry and has suffered closure of site [sic] during the Covid-19 lockdown."
(d) A contention by Mr G in a skeleton argument he prepared for an earlier hearing that settlement with M was "put on hold due to Covid-19" and as to the impact of Covid in terms of extra health and safety costs "and the postponement of many construction contracts."
He relies on other matters too, such as newspaper articles, but I do not regard those as probative, and they add nothing to our general knowledge of the effects of covid on almost every aspect of life. He invites a finding that coronavirus did have a financial effect on the company, bearing in mind the very low evidential threshold.
(a) No link is made between the downturn in the company's finances and coronavirus. I decline to draw the inference invited in the absence of commentary. Post hoc does not necessarily mean propter hoc. The sparse evidence of the company's business activity at the material times gives the firm impression that it was heavily (perhaps totally) dependent on the M contract. Apart from a brief mention of work undertaken for churches, Mr G says nothing about other current of prospective contracts that would generate the company's future cashflow. (Note the reference to "site" without an article in his written evidence mentioned in paragraph 9 above.) There is no mention of any work or prospective work having been interrupted or cancelled because of the pandemic. Furthermore, as Ms Loizou points out, a major cause of reduction in the company's assets appears to be the removal from the accounts of £2.8 million odd, which is mostly the M claim. Although there is a letter from Mr Williams explaining this, it does not convince me that recovery of that sum, or any sum, from M is likely in the near future: the company appears to have been unable to pay its advisers' fees to get an adjudication off the ground, and there is no evidence that M is going to pay voluntarily at some time in the near future, or indeed ever, unless compelled to. I also remind myself that the M contract was finished before covid began to make itself felt, at which time the company was well in arrears with its rent as well as being unable to pay Bunton. Mr Egan invited me not to attach any weight to the apparent non-payment of Bunton's fees, but the fact is that I do, because it would have been easy for Mr G to say it had been paid and the adjudication was on foot or soon would be, but this is just another of many gaps in his evidence.
(b) The accountants' letter is of little probative value for the reasons I have given above. It is, like Mr G's evidence, no more than bald assertion. The cashflow does not speak for itself: it requires explanation; there is none. There is not even an indication that the company is continuing to trade even in a modest way.
(c) Recourse to the government furlough scheme tells me nothing: the provision of furlough funding may be an indication of a financial loss, so a worsening in consequence of, or for reasons relating to, coronavirus, but it could have been neutral, compensating the company such that no loss was suffered. Again, there is a gap in the evidence.
(d) The remaining points relied on are covered by the foregoing.
The third issue
"There is […] a very limited category of cases in which, although the innocent party to a contract has not accepted a repudiation by the other party, and although the innocent party is able to continue to perform all his obligations under the contract despite the absence of co-operation from the other party, nevertheless the court will not allow the innocent party to enforce his full contractual right to maintain the contract in force and sue for the contract price. The characteristics of such cases are that an election to keep the contract alive would be wholly unreasonable and that damages would be an adequate remedy, or that the landlord would have no legitimate interest in making such an election."
Mr Egan submits that this is such a case in as much as the petitioner has no legitimate interest in keeping the lease alive, given that its position is that the company is insolvent and should be wound up, with the result that it is unlikely to recover its rent arrears in full. His argument is developed with some ingenuity in paragraphs 46 ff of his skeleton argument.
(a) For the reasons advanced by Ms Loizou. The company itself appears to have failed to take steps to mitigate its obligations; and there are, arguably, good reasons for the petitioner to hold the company to its covenants.
(b) The contention that there will be no recovery in the liquidation is speculative: true, the company is insolvent, but it does not follow that investigation by a liquidator will not result in recoveries that might result in a dividend. We simply do not know.
(c) As Mr Egan concedes, the amount the company might recover would depend on precisely when the court hearing its claim determines the point at which the petitioner ceased to have a legitimate interest in maintaining the lease. Although Mr Egan posits some figures in his skeleton argument, these are no more than supposition. There is, then, no basis on which I can conclude that any claim by the company might equal or exceed the current petition debt or even that part of it which arose before covid.
(d) Finally, making good any claim would, as I understand it, involve the company making and prosecuting a claim against the petitioner. In the light of its failure to fund its adjudication claims against M, I think I am entitled to conclude that it is unlikely that it will find funds with which to bring and pursue its claim, if indeed it has one at all.
The fourth issue
(a) To the extent that the purported claims are contractual, the particulars of both are insufficient. In particular, there is no indication of what the consideration was for the provision of the services said to have been promised.
(b) To the extent that the purported claims arise as a result of misrepresentation, Mr G fails to say that the company relied on anything said in deciding to enter into the lease (as opposed to the preceding tenancy).
(c) Whilst there may have been discussion about water, electricity and security, it is simply incredible that anything was said that amounted to a representation or a contractual term. If the services were not available when the company was occupying them under the tenancy, why would it have entered into the subsequent lease, having established that they were not being provided? And why is there no mention of these claims in any correspondence, in particular when Mr Williams was negotiating on behalf of the company in December 2019? The late stage at which these claims have been raised also speaks volumes. Mr G fails to offer any explanation for these oddities.
"[T]he mere fact that a party in proceedings not involving oral evidence or cross-examination asserts that certain things did or did not occur, is not sufficient in itself to raise a triable issue. That evidence inevitably has to be considered against the background of all the other admissible evidence and material in order to judge whether it is an allegation of any substance."
This is, adopting another well known phrase, a case of the company seeking to rely on a "cloud of objections."
Result